Preamble

The House met at half-past Two o'clock

PRAYERS

[Mr. SPEAKER in the Chair]

PRIVATE BUSINESS

GLOUCESTER CORPORATION BILL (By Order)

PEOPLE'S DISPENSARY FOR SICK ANIMALS BILL (By Order)

Second Reading deferred till Wednesday next at Seven o'clock.

Oral Answers to Questions — EDUCATION

New School, Wilnecote

Mr. Moss: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education when he expects that work will commence on the construction of a new secondary modern school at Wilnecote, in the County of Warwick.

The Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education (Sir Edward Boyle): In the Summer of 1958.

Mr. Moss: Is the Minister aware that the President of the Board of Trade, when he was Minister of Education, was very sympathetic to my representations about this school and promised to bring forward the date if circumstances allowed? Is he further aware that every general class in this school is in the mid-forties in size and that this is an urgent case?

Sir E. Boyle: I am assured that the school will be ready by the time the additional children for whom it is needed are of secondary school age.

G.C.E. Examination (Secondary Modern Candidates)

Mr. Moss: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education whether he will state the number of secondary modern schools in which the

General Certificate of Education may be taken; what proportion of the secondary modern age-group gets the opportunity to take it; and with what success.

Mr. Short: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education how many secondary modern schools allow pupils to sit for the General Certificate of Education.

Sir E. Boyle: Last year more than 8,500 candidates from about 600 secondary modern schools entered for the General Certificate of Education. These schools accounted for about a quarter of the secondary modern school roll. Their candidates were successful in about half the subjects for which they entered.

Secondary Modern Schools (Courses)

Mr. Moss: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education what courses leading to certificates have been introduced into secondary modern schools, and what courses which have a precise objective.

Sir E. Boyle: I regret that I have not the information, except that which I have just given the hon. Member, to enable me to answer this Question. But last year more than 28,000 pupils stayed on at secondary modern schools beyond the age of 15 to take extended courses in a wide variety of subjects.

Mr. Moss: Is the Minister aware that the G.C.E. is only one aspect of making a secondary modern school effective, and that it is my experience that if a precise objective can be given to the secondary modern schools more and more of their pupils will take an increasing interest in education in them?

Sir E. Boyle: I know the hon. Member's interest in this matter. My noble Friend is at present considering the whole question of secondary school examinations in the light of the comments he has received on Circular No. 289 issued by his predecessor in 1955.

Technical Education

Mr. Ellis Smith: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education what are the proposed facilities to enable a great increase, at an accelerated rate, of the training of students who desire and qualify to work


their way through the secondary schools, technical schools and finish with graduate standard in science, technology and engineering.

Sir E. Boyle: I cannot in an answer describe all the developments in technical colleges and schools which will contribute to this end. A very large technical college building programme is in hand or approved, and the number of teachers in technical colleges is increasing steadily. The number of pupils obtaining the General Certificate of Education at advanced level in mathematics and physics rose by nearly 50 per cent. between 1952 and 1956, and seems likely to increase still further.

Mr. Ellis Smith: While appreciating that answer, may I ask the Minister to assure us that the question of training engineers is being treated as a matter of supreme urgency?

Sir E. Boyle: The hon. Member may be interested to be reminded that, as part of the five-year plan announced in the White Paper on Technical Education, building projects for technical colleges to the value of well over £40 million have already been approved.

Mr. Ellis Smith: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education what representations he has received since the White Papers were published on Technical Education, Training in Engineering, & c.; and if he will provide the same facilities as are provided in engineering for plastics and cotton.

Sir E. Boyle: I cannot summarise in an answer the numerous comments on the White Paper on Technical Education which have been received. Courses in plastics and cotton technology are provided in a number of technical colleges, and will be developed as required, in the same way as courses in engineering.

Mr. Ellis Smith: It was the management committee of a professional institute in Manchester which raised this matter with me. It was not informed of this situation. Does the reply which the Minister has made apply nationally? Will he make inquiries to see that the interested people in the Manchester area are as well informed about it as they should be?

Sir E. Boyle: Certainly. I understand that five technical colleges, four of them in Lancashire, provide full-time courses in cotton technology and one in plastics. Many other technical colleges provide part-time and evening courses. This number is admittedly small compared with those in engineering, but only because the demand for specialists in cotton and plastics is smaller than the demand for engineers.

Mr. E. Fletcher: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education what changes he is proposing to make in the policy announced by the previous Minister for providing increased opportunities for part-time technical education for those engaged in industry.

Sir E. Boyle: None, Sir. The Government's aim is to double the number of part-time day students, as described in the White-Paper on Technical Education issued last February.

Mr. J. Johnson: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education what proportion of the 9,000 part-time students now in higher technical education are expected to begin full-time technological courses within the next two years; and what provision he is making in this regard.

Sir E. Boyle: Advanced courses of all kinds produce some 9,500 students annually. The plan in the White Paper on Technical Education, to which we adhere, is to increase this number to 15,000, chiefly by increasing the facilities for full-time and sandwich courses.

Mr. Johnson: Is the Minister aware that his noble Friend said on 15th February that he envisaged 20,000 students in training for advanced work of whom 14,000 would "enjoy the ham in their sandwich" at any given moment. A figure of 14000 from 20,000 leaves 6,000. Since there are 9,000 part-time students and the White Paper says that that number will be doubled, how does the hon. Gentleman explain those figures?

Sir E. Boyle: Perhaps the hon. Gentleman will give me notice of that question. I have not with me the text of that speech, but my noble Friend's speech at Reading outlined the policy to which we adhere.

Mr. Johnson: But can the hon. Gentleman explain a little simple arithmetic?
If the White Paper intends to double the number of students now in part-time higher technological studies—that is to say, double the 9,000, which makes 18,000—why does the Minister envisage 6,000 in part-time training when he had deducted the 14,000 from the 20,000?

Sir E. Boyle: I would like notice of that question. Our aim is to increase the number of students taking advanced courses from 9,500 to 15,000 a year.

All-Age Schools

Dr. King: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education (1) what steps he proposes to take to speed up the reorganisation of all-age schools in view of the wide disparity of provision of separate secondary education revealed by Statistical Return No. 38, 1956;
(2) whether, in view of the fact that in 1956 12 county borough local education authorities still had over 20 per cent. of their secondary children receiving education in a primary school, he will now permit those county boroughs to include in their building programmes schools necessary to complete reorganisation into separate primary and secondary schools.

Sir E. Boyle: The proportion of 13year-old children attending all-age schools was reduced from 18 per cent. in 1950 to 9·5 per cent. in 1956. In rural areas, more new secondary schools are being built to enable this process to continue, and in urban areas projects approved for other reasons are making possible a good deal of reorganisation. But my noble Friend cannot yet allow county boroughs to build new secondary schools specifically for this purpose.

Dr. King: Perhaps, Mr. Speaker, I may put my supplementary in the form of two questions. May I ask the Parliamentary Secretary whether he is aware that, whereas by 1956 some authorities had completely reorganised secondary education, there are still authorities where a quarter, a third, and sometimes even half of the children are being educated in all-age schools? Can he remain happy as long as we have such a disparity of provision as between Gateshead with over 50 per cent. and Manchester with 25 per cent. of children still being educated at all-age

schools, while some authorities have completely abolished the all-age school?
On the county borough question, which the Minister also answered, is he aware that we are now in the paradoxical position that the county authorities are ahead of the county boroughs now in the reorganisation of secondary education, and will he not let the county boroughs get on with the job?

Sir E. Boyle: So far as the county boroughs are concerned, I have nothing to add to what I have already said, except to say that the numbers of children attending all-age schools have fallen from 17·5 per cent. in 1950 to just over 10 per cent. in 1956, which is some progress. Our aim remains that stated in the Circular No. 283, which is to start by the end of 1959 the last school needed to complete reorganisation in rural areas.

Colleges of Advanced Technology

Mr. Jennings: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education what progress he has made in designating a limited number of technical colleges as colleges of advanced technology.

Sir E. Boyle: Eight technical colleges have now been designated as colleges of advanced technology. They are: Birmingham College of Technology, Bradford Technical College, Cardiff College of Technology and Commerce, Loughborough College of Technology and the Royal Technical College, Salford, and, in London, the Battersea, Chelsea and Northampton Polytechnics.

Mr. Jennings: In congratulating my right hon. and noble Friend the Minister of Education and my hon. Friend the Parliamentary Secretary on this further step in the progressive development of our educational system, may I ask if we may now assume that these advanced colleges will be excluded from the operation of the fixed general grants system? If that is so, will he explore the possibility of also excluding the remaining technical colleges?

Sir E. Boyle: I think I would rather not answer this question or be drawn on the question of the general grant, which is another matter on which there are several Questions on the Order Paper.

Mr. Chetwynd: When may we expect a decision on the college for the North-East; and if there is still any dispute between the three towns, cannot we have a college in each?

Sir E. Boyle: I rather thought the hon. Gentleman might ask this. My noble Friend has not yet received the report of the Northern Regional Advisory Council, which is considering this matter.

Health (Smoking)

Dr. Stross: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education whether he will have made a film suitable for showing to school children at an appropriate age and to all school leavers, which will advise them of the dangers of smoking to health.

Sir E. Boyle: No, Sir.

Dr. Stross: I wonder why we have had such an Answer? Is it not apparent that the Ministry has issued instructions to school teachers enabling them to read an article in the particular textbook to which I am referring, so that they can warn children? If this is sincerely meant, why not a visual aid, in view of the importance of the disease which we are discussing?

Sir E. Boyle: I understand that a film of this kind has been made in the United States, but I rather doubt if it would be acceptable as suitable for showing to school children in this country.

Mr. Hastings: Has the Parliamentary Secretary seen the film to which lie has referred? It is a most realistic film, in Technicolor, which upset many Members of this House.

Sir E. Boyle: I have not seen the film, but if it is realistic and in Technicolor, I will take an opportunity to do so.

Mr. M. Stewart: Could not the Parliamentary Secretary take a slightly less negative attitude about this? Even if there is something in it which makes this film unsuitable, cannot the Ministry consider positively what it can do on this question?

Sir E. Boyle: I am sure that my noble Friend will take note of the point made by the hon. Member. I think that the approach to that topic in the Department's Handbook on Health Education

shows the lines on which we are thinking, but certainly I take note of what the hon. Member has said.

University Awards

Mr. Chapman: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education what proposals he has received from the Yorkshire West Riding County Council for increasing the number of university awards it offers; to what extent this represents an increase upon previous proposals; and how its policy now compares with that in Lancashire.

Sir E. Boyle: My noble Friend has just received details of the revised selection arrangements for university awards which the West Riding Local Education Authority proposes to introduce. The Authority estimates that these should result in an increase of some 50 or 60 new awards for entry to universities next autumn, but I cannot make a useful comparison between the effects of their policy and that of the Lancashire Authority.

Mr. Chapman: Why cannot the Ministry do this? Ls he not aware that his predecessor in his present office estimated that the West Riding would need to give another 260 scholarships in order to come up to the standard of Lancashire? If this is all that Yorkshire is now producing in the way of improvement, would it not be a good thing to send the proposals back with the Press cuttings of the national condemnation that has been made?

Sir E. Boyle: Quite apart from the point of principle, I think that numerical comparisons between adjoining authorities can be slightly misleading, because exactly the same arrangements by the authorities could produce different results in different areas of the same size.

Mr. Hale: But though the noble Lord doth itch
To emulate the gentle Stitch
And each succeeding day seems keener
On overtaking Wilhelmina.
Does not this answer clearly show
Him plodding the fatal path of Flo?

Sir E. Boyle: I cannot think of a suitable impromptu reply on the spur of the moment.

Mr. Chapman: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education what special considerations


apply to the record of the 12 local education authorities which grant less than 14 university awards per 1,000 of the school population as compared with that of the 12 which offer 36 to 60 awards per 1,000; and to what extent these considerations explain the major part of the discrepancy.

Sir E. Boyle: It is likely that these variations are the result of a combination of different factors, including the number of pupils staying on at school after the age of 16, the opportunities for further education and employment in the area and the traditions of the area.

Mr. Chapman: But that is not an answer to the Question. I asked to what extent these considerations explain the major part of the discrepancy. Does it not remain the case, when all the considerations are allowed for, that there is a great variation in generosity among local authorities throughout the country? I want to be as conciliatory and helpful as possible. Will not the hon. Gentleman agree to examine this situation and make a statement on what the Ministry proposes to do to get the policy of the more generous authorities applied by the laggards among the local authorities?

Sir E. Boyle: Of course, there are variations in the policies of local education authorities, and I will bear in mind what the hon. Member says. But we have no evidence to suggest that this means that any substantial number of suitable candidates is prevented from going to a university. I have taken note of the points which the hon. Gentleman made in the debate last Friday.

Mr. Chapman: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education what action he proposes in order to persuade the Yorkshire West Riding Education Committee to include the L.D.S. diploma in dentistry in the list of courses for which it offers university awards and in the list of students who can be reconsidered for awards on the basis of their work, after their first year of study.

Sir. E. Boyle: My noble Friend has asked the local education authority to reconsider their decision.

Mr. Chapman: Will the hon. Gentleman go a little further and ask them to

reconsider all these restrictions? Is he not aware that I can give him a file of letters from disappointed parents in this area who have children whose opposite numbers in neighbouring authorities have been given grants? Would it not be better to get them to make a complete re-examination of their policy?

Sir E. Boyle: It is not proposed at the moment to make any special investigation into this local authority, and I think we must wait to hear the authority's response on the case which the hon. Member has in mind about the L.D.S. diploma. Certainly I take note of the points which he has raised.

Mr. T. Williams: Is the hon. Gentleman aware that anything Lancashire can do Yorkshire can always do better?

Mr. Shinwell: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education whether he will abolish the means test in those cases where State scholarships are awarded to universities.

Mr. Beswick: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education if he will take steps, by revising the present parental means test procedure, to ensure that grants and awards to university entrants are not reduced.

Sir E. Boyle: No, Sir. The Government do not at present intend to introduce any amending legislation.

Mr. Shinwell: Is the hon. Gentleman aware that among a series of bad answers this is really the worst one, and does he realise that there are many parents anxious to provide higher education at the universities for their children who are finding great difficulty because of the operation of the means test? What is the use of his noble Friend talking about the need for better education, including technological education, the great need for which in this country is so urgent, when he continues this means test?

Sir E. Boyle: I can assure the right hon. Gentleman and the House that later this year my noble Friend will be examining the arrangements for assessing university awards, in consultation with representatives of the universities and the local authority associations. But I cannot, I am afraid, say more this afternoon.

Mr. Beswick: Does the Minister appreciate that a means test cutting across an ability test is no less objectionable because it hits hardest at the so-called middle classes or professional classes? Would he bear in mind also that the reform asked for in these Questions would find much wider acceptance than any proposal to give an Income Tax allowance in the matter of education?

Sir E. Boyle: This is, I agree, an important subject, and I take the hon. Gentleman's points; but I cannot go further this afternoon.

Lord Balniel: Can my hon. Friend say how much it would cost the taxpayer to abolish this means test?

Sir E. Boyle: I am told that the cost of abolishing the test for all university awards would be about £3½ million this year in respect of United Kingdom students at universities in England and Wales.

Mr. Paget: Does the Minister consider it fair to deny a boy education which he has earned because he has mean parents?

Sir E. Boyle: This is, of course, a matter on which one has to weigh many factors on both sides. As I say, my noble Friend will be considering the whole subject of university awards later this year.

Mr. Shinwell: Is the Minister aware that it is not a question of parents being mean, but a question of the present very heavy burdens imposed on many parents who are anxious for better education for their children?

Sir E. Boyle: Of course, we are fully aware of the burdens and of the situation as it affects parents.

Children (National Assistance)

Mr. Marquand: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education whether he will arrange for a sample inquiry to be made in a number of large towns of the educational history and progress of school children whose parents are receiving National Assistance.

Sir E. Boyle: No, Sir. The Central Advisory Council for Education is about to sponsor a sample survey of the educational, social and financial background

of young people who have recently left school. My noble Friend considers that this survey should be more useful than an attempt to study the isolated influence of one economic factor.

Mr. Marquand: Surely, it is hardly an isolated factor when the parents of no fewer than 300,000 children under 16 years of age are dependent on National Assistance. Since the local education authorities undoubtedly have the information as to which parents have been drawing National Assistance—since they supply the children with free meals when their parents are drawing assistance—will he make sure that this inquiry will take note of the special case of children who have been receiving free meals at school?

Sir E. Boyle: I can assure the hon. Member that this is to be a very widespread inquiry. It is important to remember that local education authorities have power to assist pupils in school to enable them to take advantage, without hardship to themselves or to their parents, of any educational facilities available to them. National Assistance scales are not, of course, in any way related to the cost of maintaining a child at school.

Mr. Marquand: Will the hon. Gentleman ask his noble Friend to take note of the declaration of the Prime Minister: that no one should be allowed to sink below a decent level, but that everyone should be free to rise according to his gifts, his work and his worth? Will he ask his noble Friend if it is really possible to do that on 18s. a week?

Sir E. Boyle: I am sure my noble Friend is well aware of the sentiments to which the hon. Gentleman has just drawn attention.

Block Grants

Dr. King: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education what legislative changes he proposes in the apportionment of statutory responsibility between the Minister and local authorities, particularly as regards the present Ministerial responsibility for adequate school buildings, size of classes, provision of separate primary and secondary education and other duties under the 1944 Act, as a result of the proposed new structure of State grants to local authorities.

Sir E. Boyle: My noble Friend is not yet in a position to say what changes will be necessary in the Education Acts to give effect to the Government's proposals for a general grant to local authorities. It is not proposed to make any changes which would affect the apportionment of statutory responsibilities in regard to such matters as the hon. Member mentions.

Dr. King: Is the Minister aware that the spectacular advances of local education authorities since the war have been possible only because of the percentage grant; that local authorities still have a lot of work to do, even to get to the minima laid down by the 1944 Act; and that they are going to find it exceedingly difficult to carry out the duties laid on the Minister's shoulders by the Act—and which he passes on to them—unless he continues to co-operate with them in this way by a percentage grant? Will he remember that the Minister's fine speeches on education, which have inspired the country, are in danger of being jeopardised if the block grant means that some of the responsibility carried by the local authorities is to be met 100 per cent. out of their own money?

Sir E. Boyle: We cannot debate this now but, as it is a matter of some importance, perhaps the House will forgive me if I give a slightly longer supplementary answer than usual. My noble Friend sees no reason why the change in the method of calculation and payment of grant should affect the statutory responsibilities of the Minister and the local education authorities so far as concerns such matters as the hon. Member has mentioned in his Question. My noble Friend does not intend to give up controls which are needed for the maintenance of standards or the carrying out of national policy.

Mr. M. Stewart: Does the Minister remember that the Minister of Housing and Local Government, when announcing this scheme, said that it would mean much greater independence for the local authorities, with—and he used the phrase—
a great increase of responsibility"?—[OFFICIAL REPORT, 12th February, 1957; Vol. 564, c. 1083.]

In view of the answer which the Parliamentary Secretary has given us, where will that "great increase of responsibility" occur in the field of education?

Sir E. Boyle: I would rather not pursue this matter today, except to say that the details of the proposals will be worked out in consultation with the local authority associations and also with the teachers so far as they are concerned.

Mr. Swingler: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education if he will give an assurance that local education authorities will be not less favourably treated in the matter of financial grants from central government under the proposed system of general grants than hitherto.

Miss Bacon: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education if he will give an assurance that under the block grant scheme no local education authority will receive less from the Exchequer than it receives at present.

Sir E. Boyle: It is of course the Government's intention to maintain a fair and reasonable balance between grants and rate-borne expenditure. The details of the proposed new arrangements are being discussed by my right hon. Friend the Minister of Housing and Local Government with representatives of local authorities and I am unable to make any statement at present.

Mr. Swingler: Does the Parliamentary Secretary recognise that that is an extremely unsatisfactory reply and does not answer the Question? The Question asks whether he will give an assurance that local education authorities will be not less favourably treated. Is he unable to give this assurance, because, if so, that will create a great deal of anxiety in the education world? Will he not go back to his noble Friend in the Cabinet and ask for a reversal of this policy?

Sir E. Boyle: I really cannot go further within the scope of a Parliamentary Answer, especially while these discussions are still in progress.

Miss Bacon: Is the hon. Gentleman aware that his answer is really very evasive? In view of the fact that more money will be needed to be spent on


education in the next few years, not less, can he not at least say that no local education authority will receive less from the Exchequer than it now receives?

Sir E. Boyle: I really cannot go beyond what I have said in both this and previous Answers.

Mr. M. Stewart: May we have this quite clear? The hon. Gentleman has been asked whether he can give an assurance that local education authorities will be not less favourably treated than they are now. He has been asked that, and is he telling us that he cannot at least at this moment give that assurance?

Sir E. Boyle: This obviously is an extremely important Question. I think the point which was raised just now about the Minister's recent speech on the proportion of the gross national product being spent on education is a clear sign that my noble Friend realises fully the importance of the service. But to expect me to give any assurance on this highly important subject of the general grant while the discussions are in progress is really to expect more than the hon. Member himself would be likely to do were he in my position.

Mr. Stewart: Would the hon. Gentleman realise that what is worrying us is the contrast between his noble Friend's obvious realisation of educational needs and his own inability to give an assurance of this kind?

Sir E. Boyle: I think the hon. Gentleman can safely have confidence in my noble Friend and the Government to do full justice both to the claims of education and to the importance of responsibility in local government.

Mr. Swingler: On a point of order, Mr. Speaker. In view of the extremely unsatisfactory reply, I beg to give notice that I shall raise the matter on the Adjournment of the House.

Mr. M. Stewart: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education what representations he has received from teachers concerning the possible effect on education of the Government's proposed changes in local government finance; and what reply he has made.

Sir E. Boyle: In a letter dated 1lth February, the General Secretary of the

National Union of Teachers stressed the importance which the union attached to a grant formula related to a percentage of approved educational expenditure. My noble Friend replied that he would be glad to discuss the Government's proposals with the union at an appropriate stage.

Ineducable Children

Mr. Janner: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education how many children under the age of 16 have been deemed in the past five years to be ineducable; how many of them are attending occupation centres; and how many of them do not get any kind of education at all.

Sir E. Boyle: There were 15,478 children reported by local education authorities during the years 1951–55 as incapable of receiving education at school. Training in occupation centres is a matter for my right hon. Friend the Minister of Health. In December, 1955. there were 5,055 children under 16 in occupation centres, and at the same date there were 2,942 children regarded as suitable for training at occupation centres but not receiving it.

Mr. Janner: Is the hon. Gentleman aware that there is very deep concern about these children and that every one of them should have some kind of education? Is it not very unfair of the education authorities to push them back on to the parents, since neither the parents nor the children can benefit from such an arrangement? Will the hon. Gentleman go into the matter very carefully and remedy the position?

Sir E. Boyle: We shall look into the matter very carefully indeed, but Questions on training and occupation centres are for my right hon. Friend the Minister of Health.

School Building Programme

Mr. Swingler: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education if he will now take steps to enlarge the school building programme.

Lord Balniel: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education whether he will make a statement about the school building programmes for 1957–58 and 1958–59.

Sir E. Boyle: My noble Friend proposes to increase the school building programme for 1957–58 from £50 million, as announced in Circular 306 of June, 1956, to £55 million, the same size as the programme for 1956–57. To give effect to this, certain local education authorities have already been told that a number of urgent projects may be brought forward to start in 1957–58. My noble Friend will also approve a programme of £55 million for 1958–59.

Mr. Swingler: While being grateful for small mercies and welcoming the increase announced, may I ask if the Parliamentary Secretary is aware that it may not be quite as big as it appears on the surface because of the increase in costs? Will he continue to translate the Minister's verbal vigour into action in order that the needs of the children in overcrowded classrooms may be met?

Sir E. Boyle: There is a Question later on the Paper relating to a substantial reduction in costs per place. On the other point, I can assure the hon. Gentleman that both vigorous words and strong action will continue to be employed.

Lord Balniel: While welcoming this increase, may I ask my hon. Friend whether it will enable a reduction in school classes to be achieved or whether it is merely an increase which will enable us to keep pace with the increasing school population?

Sir E. Boyle: The question of the reduction of school classes is a separate one, but there is no reason to go back on the more optimistic forecast which I gave some six weeks ago in answer to a Question.

Mr. M. Stewart: Does the hon. Gentleman observe that it means that the money figure will have remained stationary for four years? Although in the past there has been a reduction in cost per place, I shall be surprised if the hon. Gentleman expects the reduction to go on at the rate it has done. Does not the hon. Gentleman agree that it is difficult to reconcile the stationary money figure with the way in which his noble Friend is talking about educational expenditure?

Sir E. Boyle: My noble Friend was saying in his speech, which I think received a warm welcome in the country,

that he did not believe that 3 per cent. of the gross national product was an excessive sum to spend on the nation's education. With that I should have thought there would have been general agreement in the House.

Mr. Swingler: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education how many projects which were included in the 1955–56 school building programme have not yet been started; and which local authorities are involved.

Sir E. Boyle: On 31st January 65 of these projects had not been started. Thirty-two local education authorities are involved. I am sending the hon. Member a list of them.

Mr. Swingler: Does this not demonstrate the need for a thoroughgoing review of the school building programme? Does not the Answer say that there are still 65 projects which could have been started before last March and which have not yet been started? Will the Parliamentary Secretary urge an inquiry into the reason why there are still these arrears. which are nearly 12 months late, and ensure that in the next educational building programme these projects are included in anything that is now planned?

Sir E. Boyle: The failure of the 65 projects to start before 31st March, 1956, was due to a variety of reasons. But I can tell the hon. Gentleman that partly as a result of the credit squeeze and the tight restrictions on borrowing for investment purposes and other reasons, the labour force engaged in educational building has increased substantially during the past year.

School Laboratories

Mr. E. Fletcher: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education if he will take steps to encourage local authorities to expand the laboratory accommodation in all maintained schools in order to meet the increasing demands for sixth-form science teaching.

Sir E. Boyle: A great deal has already been done within the scope of post-war school building programmes. My noble Friend intends to include in the 1957–58 and 1958–59 programmes more work than hitherto, specifically designed to improve facilities in secondary schools for teaching science, especially in sixth forms.

Mr. Fletcher: Is the Minister aware that the real key to increasing our scientific manpower lies in the sixth form of schools? Does he realise that £3 million has been raised within the year to improve the laboratory accommodation in independent schools, and is it not at least necessary that local authorities should spend vastly more on improving laboratory accommodation in order to encourage rather more sixth form students to take up science in grammar schools?

Sir E. Boyle: I entirely share the hon. Gentleman's sense of the great importance of the subject. I would add that since 1945 about £15 million has already been spent on the provision of laboratories in secondary schools.

Nursery Schools, Bridgwater and Yeovil

Mr. Wilkins: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education whether he is aware of the decision of the Somerset County Council Education Committee to close its nursery schools in Bridgwater and Yeovil; what protests or representations he has received in this regard from responsible organisations both locally and nationally; and whether, in view of the urgent need for the continuance of these schools having regard to the requirements of Section 8 (2) (b) of the Education Act, 1944, he will issue a direction under the powers conferred upon him by Section 68 of that Act.

Sir E. Boyle: My noble Friend was informed of this decision and received representations about it from the managers of both schools and from parents. He requested the local education authority to give an explanation of its decision, and he received this yesterday. He is now considering it.

Mr. Wilkins: I am grateful to the Parliamentary Secretary for that Answer so far as it goes, but may I ask him whether he will give consideration to, or call for an analysis of, the categories of children attending both these schools, so that he will be made aware that 75 per cent. of them are in the top priority classes, including those on the waiting list?

Sir E. Boyle: I know the hon. Gentleman has expressed much concern upon

this matter, as have, by letter, my hon. Friend the Member for Bridgwater (Mr. Wills) and my hon. Friend the Member for Yeovil (Mr. Peyton); but I cannot anticipate my noble Friend's decision upon it.

Mr. Peyton: I am grateful to my hon. Friend for his acknowledgement of the interest of my hon. Friend the Member for Bridgwater and myself, which is rather more immediate than is that of the hon. Member for Bristol, South (Mr. Wilkins) who raised the point. [HON. MEMBERS: "Why?"] May I ask my hon. Friend if he will press this matter with the Somerset County Council, which itself not very long ago decided that the retention of these two schools was desirable and necessary, and would he put it to the authority in Taunton also that it really has not yet appreciated the needs of growing industrial areas?

Sir E. Boyle: I can only repeat that I cannot anticipate what my noble Friend will decide.

School Places (Average Cost)

Major Beamish: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education the approximate cost of providing one new place in State schools in the financial year 1949–50; what he estimates will be the approximate cost in this finacial year, giving these figures as actual figures, and at constant prices and what has been the total saving to the taxpayers and ratepayers resulting from the economies that have been made in this field since the General Election of 1950.

Sir E. Boyle: The average cost of a primary and secondary school place in 1949 was £195 and £324, respectively. The average during 1956 was about £150 and £260, respectively. The progressive reduction in cost per place has saved the taxpayer and the ratepayer about £85 million without taking into account the general rise in building costs. If that also were taken into account the saving could be described as about £200 million.

Grammar School Places

Miss Bacon: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education what steps he is taking to encourage local education authorities with


a small percentage of grammar school accommodation to increase the number of grammar school places or provide comprehensive schools.

Mr. M. Stewart: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education what steps he is taking to secure greater uniformity among local education authorities in the proportion of pupils for whom grammar school education is available.

Sir E. Boyle: I would refer the hon. Members to the Answer I gave to the hon. Member for Dartford (Mr. Sydney Irving) on 24th January.

Miss Bacon: Is the Minister aware that, according to the list which he sent to me recently, which, in spite of requests from many hon. Members, he did not publish in the OFFICIAL REPORT, 12 authorities have grammar school places for 30 per cent. and over of their children, 9 of those being in Wales? Is he further aware that 38 local authorities have grammar school places for 15 per cent. of their children or less, and does not this make a mockery of equality of opportunity for everyone? Will he say what he is doing to remedy this state of affairs?

Sir E. Boyle: I absolutely agree with the hon. Lady that this is the most important aspect of our educational policy at the present time, but it is really too big a subject to debate at Question time. I can only repeat that, owing to the great variety of local circumstances, one could never expect a very high degree of uniformity between local authorities.

Mr. Stewart: In view of what the Minister has just said about the great importance of this subject, could he make available in the OFFICIAL REPORT and, possibly, in the Annual Report of the Ministry, the information which he has furnished to my hon. Friend the Member for Leeds. South-East (Miss Bacon)?

Sir E. Boyle: I am sure that my noble Friend will consider both points.

Further Education

Mr. M. Stewart: asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Education whether, in view of the coming

increase in the number of young people between the ages of 15 and 17 years, he will invite local education authorities to prepare plans for the further education of adolescents.

Sir E. Boyle: The White Paper on Technical Education included a five-year programme for the expansion of further education at all levels. Plans are being worked out with local education authorities and much work is already in progress.

Oral Answers to Questions — COMMONWEALTH RELATIONS

High Commission Territories (Civil Service Staffs)

Mr. Brockway: asked the Under-Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations the number of posts held in the civil services by non-African members of the Union of South Africa in Basutoland, Swaziland and Bechuanaland, respectively; and what is the number of Africans in the civil services in each territory.

The Under Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations (Mr. C. J. M. Alport): As my reply contains a number of figures, I will, with permission, circulate it in the OFFICIAL REPORT.

Mr. Brockway: While awaiting the opportunity to look at those figures, may I ask the hon. Gentleman if he is aware that although some of these officials from South Africa have gone to the Protectorates as a result of liberal views, there is a considerable fear among the African population of incorporation? Will he do his utmost to encourage facilities for Africans to take these posts?

Mr. Alport: The fear, if it exists, is unfounded. On recruitment for the Service in the Protectorates, I can only say that the information of my noble Friend is absolutely the same as that set out by the right hon. Member for Derby, South (Mr. P. Noel-Baker) when he was Secretary of State, in which he said:
I have every confidence in the staff of the High Commission Territories, from whatever country they may have been recruited."—[OFFICIAL REPORT, 17th November, 1949; Vol. 469. c. 230.]

Following is the reply:

In the Civil Service of Basutoland there are 197 European officers, of whom 72 are citizens of the Union of South Africa and 311 are citizens both of the Union and of the United Kingdom and Colonies.

In Bechuanaland there are 302 European officers, of whom 196 are citizens of the Union of South Africa and 58 are citizens both of the Union and of the United Kingdom and Colonies.

Information about the citizenship of members of the Civil Service of Swaziland is immediately available only in respect of administrative officers. Of a total of 21 European administrative officers, four are citizens of the Union of South Africa and three are citizens both of the Union and of the United Kingdom and Colonies

The numbers of Africans in the Civil Services are as follows:


Basutoland
…
…
…
1,380


Bechuanaland
…
…
…
1,306


Swaziland
…
…
…
1,303

Basutoland (Mr. Moremoholo)

Mr. Brockway: asked the Under-Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations under what conditions Mr. Abraham Moremoholo was appointed to a post in the Public Works Department in Maseru in Basutoland; and what are his pay and conditions.

Mr. Alport: Mr. Abraham Moremoholo is not, and never has been, an employee of the Public Works Department in Basutoland.

Mr. Brockway: Is the hon. Gentleman aware that I am not surprised by that Answer, because when Mr. Moremoholo applied—[Laughter.] The laughter will be on my side before I have finished. Is the hon. Gentleman aware that when Mr. Moremoholo applied for this post, although he is a skilled engineer and an instructor, he was offered it at £8 a month, whilst Europeans whom he had trained were being paid between £60 and £70 a month?

Mr. Alport: Mr. Moremoholo in fact applied with seven other Africans for an appointment with the P.W.D. Five of them were considered to be most suitable and were offered employment with the P.W.D. Those were the only circumstances in which Mr. Moremoholo was in contact with the P.W.D. in regard to employment.

South Africa (British Service Man)

Mr. Brockway: asked the Under-Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations, what representations have been made to the Government of the Union of South Africa regarding the action of the police in threatening to arrest Desmond Bishop, a native of British Guiana serving in the Royal Air Force, and in returning him to his ship in a police car because he was walking hand-in-hand with an English girl in Durban.

Mr. Alport: None. Sir.

Mr. Brockway: Does not the hon. Gentleman think that our Government should pay more regard to the rights of our citizens in South Africa? This boy was merely walking hand-in-hand with a girl, who was not a "pick-up" but an old friend of his. He was held up by the police, bundled into a police car and returned to his ship. Does not the hon. Gentleman think we should make some representations when human rights are outraged in that way?

Mr. Alport: The aircraftman in question was not arrested or charged as his action was not illegal in accordance with South African law. In those circumstances, there was no occasion for representations to be made. The hon. Member is as well aware as I am that there are strong prejudices in these matters in South Africa. I am sure he would agree that it would be most unfortunate if any British Service man were involved in any incidents there in those circumstances.

New Commonwealth Countries (Development)

Mr. E. L. Mallalieu: asked the Under-Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations if the Government have yet reached a decision on the methods and extent of continued aid to economic development in Ghana following independence, with particular reference to the Volta River Scheme.

Mr. Alport: The Government are engaged in a comprehensive review of the United Kingdom's rôle in the economic development of newly independent countries such as Ghana. My noble Friend is consulting other members of the Commonwealth on the subject and this process of consultation is not yet completed. As regards the Volta Scheme, I would refer


the hon. and learned Member to the reply given on the 27th February to the hon. Member for Barnsley (Mr. Mason).

Mr. Mallalieu: Is the hon. Gentleman not aware that these consultations have already taken a very considerable time and there is a feeling both here and in Ghana that aid was stopped somewhat abruptly on the achievement of independence? Is he further aware that the Secretary of State for the Colonies said last July that if the Volta scheme was to be prosecuted satisfactorily there was need for the utmost speed in order to make it financially successful?

Mr. Alport: I can assure the hon. Gentleman that we are anxious to give as much assistance to Ghana as possible consistent with the new status which Ghana has now achieved.

Mr. E. L. Mallalieu: asked the Under-Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations if he is undertaking a comprehensive review of the question of development in new Dominions in consultation with the rest of the Commonwealth; and if he will call a conference for this purpose.

Mr. Alport: Other Commonwealth Governments have been consulted on the various suggestions made during the debate on Commonwealth Development on 30th November and the Government are reviewing the United Kingdom's rôle in the development of new independent Commonwealth countries. The question of what further action should be taken will arise as part of this review.

Mr. Mallalieu: Cannot the hon. Gentleman do something to hurry this matter up? Are we to wait until new Dominions come along and cause similar disappointments to those which have been caused in the case of Ghana? Does not Ghana deserve special ad hoc aid in view of the fact that it has taken over our burdens in regard to the Northern Territories?

Mr. Alport: I am sure it would be the wish of the whole House that, in a matter of this sort—a Commonwealth matter—plenty of time should be given for the Commonwealth countries to consider the implications my noble Friend has put to them and the outcome should be treated as a Commonwealth matter as a whole.

Mr. Bevan: Would it not be very much more desirable for this new constitutional arrangement to be fixed as early as possible before ill feeling arises? If we are to give help—and we ought to give help—to new Commonwealth nations like this it should be done at once and not after a long period during which time a great deal of bad feeling might be created.

Mr. Alport: In view of the extremely good relations which exist between this country and Ghana, as evidenced over recent weeks, I am sorry that the right hon. Member should introduce an allusion to ill feeling.

Mr. Bevan: May I ask the hon. Gentleman to reflect upon that answer again? We have discussed this matter in the House on several occasions. We discussed it last year, and at that time we impressed on the Colonial Secretary the need for there being no hiatus between the economic help given to new nations and what they were receiving when they were dependent territories. It is not a question of my intimating that there is bad feeling, but that we ought to act before it can arise.

Mr. Alport: The right hon. Member will be aware that the discussion took place on 30th November. In consideration of the fact that consultation must be undertaken with all Commonwealth Governments, I do not think a very long stretch of time has elapsed.

Republic of Eire and Northern Ireland

Mr. P. Bell: asked the Under-Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations in view of the increasing tension in Ireland, if he will initiate discussions with the Republic of Eire and the Government of Northern Ireland upon the Republic's joining the Commonwealth on the basis of the proposals recently made by Dr. D'Alton the Cardinal Archbishop of Armagh.

Mr. Alport: The present relationship of Northern Ireland to the United Kingdom is guaranteed by the Ireland Act, 1949, passed with the consent of all parties in Parliament. The status of Northern Ireland as an integral part of the United Kingdom can only be altered with the consent of the Parliament of Northern Ireland.
Her Majesty's Government would always be ready to consider sympathetically any proposals for the future status of Ireland which command the support both of the Parliament of Northern Ireland and of the Government of the Irish Republic. But my noble Friend has no evidence that the proposals to which my hon. and learned Friend refers have such support, and he does not therefore propose to initiate discussions on them.

Mr. Bell: Does my hon. Friend appreciate that a federated Ireland would be of immense value, both economically and strategically, to N.A.T.O. and that if these two countries could get together and the Republic could join the Commonwealth they would earn an immense debt of gratitude from all the people who love freedom?

Mr. Alport: Whatever may be the feelings of my hon. and learned Friend and of other hon. Members on this matter, it would be right if I referred him to the remarks made by the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland and the Taoiseach of the Irish Republic, which I think put this matter into its proper perspective.

Mr. Hector Hughes: Does the hon. Gentleman not realise that this is a matter in which Her Majesty's Government should take the initiative in the interest of the peace and good will of the peoples in these two islands?

Mr. Alport: This is a matter for the Parliament and people of Northern Ireland and for the Parliament and people of the Irish Republic.

Sir D. Campbell: Is my hon. Friend aware that the great majority of the people of Northern Ireland have a deep pride in their loyalty to the Crown and that no proposal which would take them out of the United Kingdom or transfer their allegiance to a republic can have the least hope of being accepted?

Mr. Alport: I think that all sides of the House are aware of and appreciate the very strong attachments of loyalty to the Crown which exist in Northern Ireland. To Her Majesty's Government that is a primary factor in any consideration of this matter.

Emigrants (Canada, Australia and New Zealand)

Mr. Shinwell: asked the Under-Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations the number of persons who have emigrated to Canada, Australia and New Zealand respectively, since the beginning of 1957.

Mr. Alport: Since 1st January, 1957, 5,858 persons have sailed for Australia under the Assisted Passage Scheme and 44 for New Zealand under the New Zealand Government's Free Passage Scheme.
No figures are available as yet of emigrants to Canada or of emigrants to Australia and New Zealand other than those travelling under the schemes mentioned.

Oral Answers to Questions — MINISTERS' AND MEMBERS' SALARIES

Mr. Lewis: asked the Prime Minister whether he will move to appoint a Royal Commission to inquire into all matters pertaining to the salaries and pensions of Members of Parliament, with terms of reference to include the consideration of the last Select Committee's Report on this subject, and to report to what extent Members' salaries should be amended to enable them to meet the costs of carrying out their duties to the State, after taking into account the general rise in the cost of living and the rise in the wage and salary scales of workers generally.

The Prime Minister (Mr. Harold Macmillan): No, Sir.

Mr. Lewis: Why the difference between Members of Parliament and doctors, and why the difference between Members of Parliament and the industrial workers in the shipbuilding industry? If the Prime Minister will not agree to set up an independent arbitrator, can he suggest some other means of getting the Government to accept their responsibility and hurry up the implementation of their promise? What action does the Prime Minister propose to take to implement the promise made in 1954? Is the right hon. Gentleman aware that if hon. Members opposite can go out and earn their living, because we give them the opportunity, I should have thought that they would have supported my Question?

Mr. M. Lindsay: Is my right hon. Friend aware that what the public object to so much on this issue is that we should be judge and jury in our own case? Although we cannot avoid the responsibility of being the judge, the appointment of an outside body to make recommendations at least has the advantage that we do not also have to be the jury. In view of the fact that at some time or other something will have to be done, would it surely not be better to have the advantage of a report from an entirely outside body?

The Prime Minister: I have all these matters in mind, but I am afraid I am not ready to make any statement today.

Mr. Lewis: asked the Prime Minister whether he is aware that, since the introduction of the Ministers of the Crown Act, 1937, fixing salaries of Ministers of Cabinet rank at £5,000 per annum, and Ministers and Junior Ministers at £3,000 per annum, £2,000 per annum, and £1,500 per annum, these are now worth only £1,810 per annum, £1,086, £724 and £543, respectively, and that even where a Minister who is not of Cabinet rank draws £500 of his Parliamentary salary, this at present spending value only adds another £310; and what action he proposes to take to introduce the necessary amending legislation to deal with these anomalies.

The Prime Minister: Although I note that the hon. Gentleman has now extended his campaign for higher salaries into a new territory, I am afraid I cannot depart from my position of reticence.

Mr. Lewis: I am glad that the Prime Minister is pleased to note that I extend my campaign on behalf of all the underprivileged people, including Ministers of the Crown? But is it not really wrong that we should have the present position in which some Ministers have not had an alteration in their salary for over 100 years? Is not that even worse than the case of Members of Parliament who have not had an increase in their basic salary since 1946? Will the Prime Minister promise to do something to put this matter right?

The Prime Minister: As I have said, I will consider all these matters.

Oral Answers to Questions — CHEQUERS (MEETING OF MINISTERS)

Mr. Lewis: asked the Prime Minister how many Ministerial cars were used to convey Members of Her Majesty's Government to Chequers on Saturday, 23rd February; and how many drivers were employed on these journeys.

The Prime Minister: I have nothing to add to the Answer I gave on 28th February.

Mr. Lewis: Is the Prime Minister aware that he gave no information in that reply and that he has not given any information in this reply either? How many cars were used? How many drivers were employed? How much petrol was used in the seven cars? If seven cars were not used, can the right hon. Gentleman give the number?

The Prime Minister: I think that on the whole the House will regard these as somewhat frivolous questions, and I do not think that I should be asked to answer them. However, I will say for the hon. Member's information that, strange as it may appear in the light of recent newspaper revelations, the Foreign Secretary and I travelled down to Chequers in the same car.

Mr. Lewis: Is the Prime Minister aware that these are not frivolous questions at a time when commercial travellers are being prevented from earning their living in order to supply seven cars and seven quantities of petrol, when, in fact, one car would have sufficed?

Oral Answers to Questions — ARTS (GOVERNMENT PATRONAGE)

Dame Irene Ward: asked the Prime Minister whether he will recommend the appointment of a Royal Commission to consider problems arising out of subsidising the arts.

The Prime Minister: No, Sir; I would refer my hon. Friend to the answer I gave to my hon. Friend the Member for Aberdeenshire, East (Sir R. Boothby) on Tuesday last.

Dame Irene Ward: Is my right hen. Friend aware that that answer was not satisfactory? Will he reconsider the


position in view of the fact that a very large number of people feel that the only way of getting to the root of this problem and of finding a solution is by the appointment of a Royal Commission? Will my right hon. Friend, therefore, very kindly reconsider the matter in this light?

The Prime Minister: I will, of course, reconsider it. We had almost a little discussion on this matter last Tuesday, and I would certainly recognise that my hon. Friend's suggestion is narrower than the one put forward by the hon. Member, in that it deals only with the question of the arts and, therefore, might be more useful; but I still do not think that this is the right method to proceed.

Oral Answers to Questions — MINISTER OF EDUCATION (SPEECH)

Mr. V. Yates: asked the Prime Minister if the speech delivered by the Minister of Education at the London Head Teachers' Association on Saturday, 9th March, represents the policy of Her Majesty's Government.

Mr. J. Johnson: asked the Prime Minister whether the statement made by the Minister of Education on 9th March at the London Head Teachers' Conference, relating to educational financial economies, represents the policy of Her Majesty's Government.

The Prime Minister: My noble Friend was giving an account of how he viewed our educational system and his own functions as Minister of Education. I have read his speech with interest and admiration and, while I could not myself emulate his vivid style and dramatic presentation, I think that this country can count itself very fortunate in its Minister of Education.

Mr. Yates: Whilst welcoming the remarks made by the Minister, in view of the fact that he has publicly stated that the Estimates for Education will not fall as long as he is Minister of Education and that he has said that he is spoiling for a fight, may I ask with whom he is spoiling for a fight and whether every Minister will now be free to determine that his Estimates shall not fall?

The Prime Minister: It all seems to have been a very agreeable occasion. At the end of it one headmaster asked

whether the primary school had not been the Cinderella of the educational system, and a retired headmistress said that she did not know who the Ugly Sisters were but they knew who was the Prince Charming—Lord Hailsham.

Mr. J. Johnson: Is the Prime Minister aware that the National Union of Teachers has stated that the Government's proposed new method of local government finance, by a fixed block grant system, is completely unsuited to an expanding and developing educational system? How does this square with the noble Lord's speech?

The Prime Minister: I was asked whether I agreed and approved of the speech of the Minister of Education and I said that I did.

Mr. H. Morrison: The Prime Minister was asked whether the speech of the Minister of Education represented the policy of Her Majesty's Government. Would the Prime Minister be so good as to answer this perfectly simple question, yes or no? It is a perfectly frank and straight question. Is not his Answer a deliberate evasion of the Question, and will he not say whether he agrees or not with what the Minister of Education said?

The Prime Minister: I said that, of course, I agree with what the Minister says. He always says what is sensible. That is why I made him Minister.

SHIPBUILDING INDUSTRY (DISPUTE)

Mr. Roberts: Mr. Roberts (by Private Notice) asked the Minister of Labour whether he will make a statement about the present dispute in the shipbuilding industry.

The Minister of Labour and National Service (Mr. Iain Macleod): Since I made my statement to the House on Tuesday I have, at their request, seen representatives of the unions and of the employers. I took the opportunity of emphasising to both sides that, as sooner or later the dispute must be settled, it would be infinitely better to reach a quick and peaceful settlement by referring it to arbitration as I have already suggested than to embark upon a trial of strength with all the consequences which that would involve.
The unions yesterday told me that they are not prepared to accept my suggestion of arbitration. I have just learnt from the employers that they are willing to go to arbitration by Lord Evershed and to accept his award provided that the unions will do the same and call off the threatened strike.
I intend to invite both sides to meet me again and to ask them to consider the full implications of the situation as it now stands.

Mr. Robens: None of us in this House wants to say anything which would exacerbate the present situation and I therefore refrain from making certain comments, which I had proposed to make, at this stage. I merely want to ask the Minister, in view of the fact that he is to invite both sides to meet him again, not to take our silence as indicating that we approve wholly the action of himself or the Government in this matter.

Mr. Macleod: The right hon. Gentleman is, of course, fully entitled to make such reservations as he chooses. All I will do, responding in the same spirit, is to say that I very much welcome what he said in the earlier part of his supplementary question and that I am sure that he wishes, with me, and as we all do in this House, that the counsels that all men of good will wish to see prevail will prevail in this case.

BUSINESS OF THE HOUSE

Mr. Gaitskell: May I ask the Leader of the House whether he will announce the business for next week?

The Secretary of State for the Home Department and Lord Privy Seal (Mr. R. A. Butler): Yes, Sir. The business for next week will be as follows:

MONDAY, 18TH MARCH—Second Reading of the Consolidated Fund (No. 2) Bill.
Debate on London's Housing Problem.

TUESDAY, 19TH MARCH—Committee and remaining stages of the Consolidated Fund (No. 2) Bill, which it is proposed to take formally.

Debate on the Opposition's Motion relating to the Government's Social Policy.

WEDNESDAY, 20TH MARCH—Second Reading of the Export Guarantees Bill.

Committee stage of the necessary Money Resolution, which it is hoped to obtain by about 7 o'clock.

Second Reading of the Naval Discipline Bill.

Consideration of the Lords Amendments to the Rating and Valuation Bill, which are expected to be received from another place today.

THURSDAY, 21ST MARCH—Second Reading of the National Insurance Bill, which it is hoped to obtain by about 7 o'clock.

Committee and remaining stages of the White Fish and Herring Industries (No. 2) Bill.

FRIDAY, 22ND MARCH—Consideration of Private Members' Motions.

Mr. Gaitskell: Is the right hon. Gentleman aware that in the opinion of the Opposition it might be convenient for the debate on London's housing problem to end at about seven o'clock and for the remainder of the day to be available to hon. Members, in accordance with precedent, to raise any matter in which they are interested?

Mr. Butler: It has always been a practice on the Consolidated Fund Bill for hon. Members to have the opportunity of raising what subjects they like. If it is for the convenience of the House, I hope that we may reach an arrangement of that sort. In that case, I think that it is legitimate for me to say that I hope that those who are raising particular matters will give notice to Mr. Speaker and to the Ministers concerned, because it will then be easier for an answer to be given and for Mr. Speaker to be aware of any matters that may be raised.

Sir H. Lucas-Tooth: May I ask my right hon. Friend whether the debate on London housing is confined to the London County Council area, or whether it will cover the whole of Greater London?

Mr. Butler: As this matter was chosen by the Opposition, we would have to take the Opposition's views as to the scope of the debate which they would desire on this subject. Perhaps the right hon. Gentleman the Leader of the Opposition would give us satisfaction in this matter by telling us what he has in mind.

Mr. Mitchison: It seems to us very difficult to debate the housing problem of inner London without also dealing to some extent with outer London.

Mr. Bellenger: May I ask you, Mr. Speaker, whether on that particular debate it is your intention to call only London Members or whether you will permit other hon. Members, if they so desire, to speak?

Mr. Speaker: I should have to be guided by the precise nature of the discussion as to whom I call. I certainly would not rule out other hon. Members from participating in the debate. It would not be my desire to do so. I shall have to choose hon. Members as they offer themselves to speak.

Mr. C. Pannell: In view of the tradition of the House that Scottish Members usually wish to be left alone when discussing Scottish affairs, and Welsh Members expect to be left alone to discuss their affairs, may I, as a Londoner representing a Yorkshire constituency, and not wishing to speak at all, suggest that the cockneys. with their huge population, should be left to discuss their affairs and that Scotsmen and Welshmen should keep a decent distance and a respectful silence on this occasion?

Mr. Speaker: The convention which has grown up with regard to participation by other hon. Members in debates on Scottish and Welsh affairs arises from the pugnacious nationalism of those two countries. I have no doubt that if London Members are true to their nature a similar convention might in due course grow up.

Mr. S. Silverman: If, Mr. Speaker, the convention were to be encouraged too far and other parts of the country were to be incited to a similar pugnacious regionalism, if not nationalism, might not the affairs of this House resolve themselves into a series of glorified county councils?

Mr. Speaker: So far as the Chair is concerned, I can give no official guidance on any such feelings of nationalism or separatism. I call on hon. Members as they offer themselves to speak. It is entirely a convention for the House to create or ignore as it pleases.

Mr. Gaitskell: As there is a very special problem so far as London is concerned

some of us, at any rate, think it worth while having a half-day to discuss it. Would the Lord Privy Seal say when the Government expect to produce the White Paper on atomic energy development?

Mr. Butler: I cannot give an exact date, but I will take the opportunity of seeing that the House is informed when we have a date in mind.

Mr. Braine: Can my right hon. Friend say whether an early opportunity will be afforded for us to discuss a subject which most of us regard, on both sides of the House, as of supreme importance? As the Messina Powers have agreed to incorporate their colonial territories inside the Common Market and the treaty is drafted and ready for signature now, but the O.E.E.C. working party which was set up will not report until June, and we may be faced with a fait accompli, will he give an assurance that we shall have an early opportunity of discussing this matter?

Mr. Butler: The best thing that I can say in reply is that I will discuss that with my right hon. Friend the Chancellor of the Exchequer and my right hon. Friend the President of the Board of Trade. Clearly, it raises an issue of great importance. I should not like at present to give an undertaking about a day for discussion, because this particular concept is one which will take a long time to develop; but as long as I can tell my hon. Friend that I will discuss it and inform him and the House, I hope that he will feel satisfied.

Mr. D. Jones: Now that the right hon. Gentleman has returned from taking part in the celebrations on the formation of an independent country in the Commonwealth, does he think that he can find some Parliamentary time to provide the necessary statutory security for railway-men. shop and office workers, as recommended in the Gowers Report?

Mr. Butler: That is a matter for which I am sure there will not be time in this Session. As for next Session, I think that we had better wait until we hear the next Gracious Speech.

Ordered,
That this day Business other than the Business of Supply may be taken before Ten o'clock.— [The Prime Minister.]

Orders of the Day — SUPPLY [13th March]

[9TH ALLOTTED DAY]

CIVIL ESTIMATES AND ESTIMATES FOR REVENUE DEPARTMENTS, SUPPLEMENTARY ESTIMATE, 1956–57, CLASS II, VOTES 2, 4, AND 9; CLASS III, VOTE 4; NAVY ESTIMATES, 1957–58 (VOTE ON ACCOUNT); CIVIL ESTIMATES AND ESTIMATES FOR REVENUE DEPARTMENTS, 1956–57, ALL OUTSTANDING SUPPLEMENTARY ESTIMATES; MINISTRY OF DEFENCE, NAVY AND AIR SUPPLEMENTARY ESTIMATES, 1956–57; AND CIVIL EXCESSES, 1955–56

Resolution reported,

CIVIL ESTIMATES AND ESTIMATES FOR REVENUE DEPARTMENTS, SUPPLEMENTARY ESTIMATE, 1956–57

CLASS II

VOTE 2. FOREIGN OFFICE GRANTS AND SERVICES

1. That a Supplementary sum, not exceeding £917,893, be granted to Her Majesty, to defray the charge which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1957, for sundry grants and services connected with Her Majesty's Foreign Service, including subscriptions to international organisations and grants in aid.

Resolution read a Second time.

Motion made, and Question proposed, That this House doth agree with the Committee in the said Resolution.

Orders of the Day — MIDDLE EAST

3.41 p.m.

The Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (Mr. Selwyn Lloyd): I have not changed the views which I have repeatedly expressed to this House about the events of October and November of last year, but I do not propose to cover that ground again today. I propose to concentrate in what I have to say on the present position and on the future. I think that we all have to remember that this debate is taking place at a particularly critical time because, on almost every point, crucial negotiations are taking place now.
However, I will begin with one topic where some negotiations have just

reached a conclusion, and that is the question of Jordan. As the House knows, an Agreement has been signed with the Jordan Government terminating the Anglo-Jordan Treaty of 1948. The terms of the Agreement are that the British forces shall withdraw from Jordan within six months, and will remove or dispose of military stores in Jordan within that period. The Jordan Government will take over our military installations in Jordan and certain quantities of equipment, stores and ammunition which we have agreed to sell to them.
In respect of this, and in full and final settlement of all the claims between us based on the provisions of the 1948 Treaty, the Jordan Government will pay £4¼ million. Three million pounds of that sum will be paid in six equal annual instalments, the first to be payable on 1st May, 1958. Of the remaining £1¼ million, about £650.000 will be paid in cash on 1st May of this year, and the balance of about £600,000 will be set off against part of the subsidy payment for February —a payment which, in fact, was not made. It has been agreed that there shall be no subsidy payment for March. The balance of the February subsidy payment, amounting to about £240,000, will be set aside in a special fund to be held in this country for the settlement of outstanding Jordanian liabilities, including claims by seconded and contract officers whose services with the Jordan armed forces were terminated.
There is, in addition, a subsidiary agreement relating to the sale of a certain quantity of ammunition. It is a matter upon which agreement was reached too late for it to be included in the main Agreement. It relates to the payment of a sum of £350,000 for certain ammunition over a period of seven years. We are removing from Jordan substantial quantities of equipment, stores and ammunition which we need for our own purposes, and that movement has already started on a considerable scale.
The subject matter of this Agreement concerns what has been left behind, and in deciding how much shall be paid by the Jordan Government we have had regard to the condition of the equipment left, our need for it, the cost of moving it, and the extent to which it is realisable. For example, the prospects of realising in


the open market a runway on an airfield are not very large. Obviously, that has to be disposed of to the Government of the country in which it is situated. Taking the Agreement as a whole, although we have tried to treat Jordan with generosity, we have been mindful of the interests of the taxpayer, and we have also, of course, had to have some regard to Jordan's capacity to pay.

Mr. E. Shinwell: I am sorry to interrupt the right hon. and learned Gentleman, but will he elucidate one point? Are we leaving any of our aircraft in Jordan, aircraft that were in the possession of the R.A.F. there?

Mr. Lloyd: No.

Mr. Shinwell: None at all?

Mr. Lloyd: No. I will lay a White Paper which will contain the details of this Agreement which are, I admit, somewhat complicated, but, to express an opinion generally, the Agreement marks the end of a chapter in Anglo-Jordanian relations. Over the years our relations with this State, for whose creation we have so large a responsibility, have, naturally, undergone changes. We were deeply affected by the summary treatment meted out to General Glubb, a devoted servant of Jordan, and we have greatly admired the way in which he has not allowed any words of recrimination or bitterness to pass his lips since his dismissal. Harsh things have been said about us by many Jordanians. Nevertheless, we wish to terminate this Treaty in a spirit of good will. Of late, it has not been of strategic value to us, but has involved us in onerous and extensive commitments. Therefore, we are glad to terminate it by mutual consent.
The negotiations have been carried through in a spirit of friendliness. I think that the result is a fair one and quite satisfactory. In the past, our alliance has been the main buttress of the independence of Jordan. The Jordanians, however, have frequently expressed their desire to stand upon their own feet. Well, they will now have the opportunity, and we hope that without us they will succeed in becoming a viable State and in maintaining their independence. After thirty-five years' association, and particularly remembering the friendship of a great man, King Abdullah, I am sure that all quarters

of the House would wish to King Hussein and to his country good fortune, and to express the hope that our friendly relations will be re-created.
That is one of the matters where, as I have said, some negotiations have come to a termination. Now I come to the question of the Gaza strip. The facts about the Gaza strip seem to me to be these. No country has legal sovereignty. By the Armistice Agreement of 1949 the Gaza strip was not demilitarised. Egypt was left in military occupation. Since then, until October, 1956, Egypt exercised de facto authority, but the provisions of the Armistice Agreement were, of course, dictated solely by military considerations, and other matters were excluded from its scope. During the recent hostilities, Israel captured the area.
The other relevant fact is that from the Gaza strip there have taken place over a period of years what would appear to have been organised fedayeen raids across the border into Israel. The view of Her Majesty's Government is, as we have frequently said, that we thought Israel should withdraw from the Gaza strip, but we hoped that there would emerge a constructive solution. And the solution which we have favoured has been the placing of the strip, both from the military and civil point of view, under some form of international control.
I told the House on 3rd December that we believed that the strip should be made a United Nations responsibility. That would not involve a loss of prestige for either side; in fact, it would relieve them both of considerable burdens. It seems right also to us that the United Nations, in view of the failure to solve the Arab-Israel problem over the years, should assume a more direct responsibility. We thought that this solution would be a constructive experiment. I believe that it would materially improve the prospects of the refugees. As I say, it would bring the United Nations into the area in a positive role. That has been our view, and that is still the view of Her Majesty's Government.
I am afraid that the position of the United Nations in this matter cannot be stated in such simple terms. Anyone who has tried to study the various reports and resolutions will agree with me on that point. In fact, I might also almost say


that the first prize seems to be for ambiguity in these matters. However, Israel, by her withdrawal has fully complied with the first resolution of the General Assembly on 2nd February. Right hon. and hon. Members will remember that on that date there was also a second resolution. In our view, those two resolutions were inter-related, and we certainly would not have voted for the first unless we thought that the second would be passed, although we were not even satisfied with the precision of the second resolution; but it was better than nothing.
According to the second resolution, the General Assembly stated that, after the full withdrawal of Israel, the scrupulous maintenance of the armistice arrangement required the placing of U.N.E.F., the Emergency Force, on the armistice line and the implementation of other measures as proposed in the Secretary-General's report of 24th January. It is true to say that in that report the Secretary-General stated that any assumption by the United Nations of civil responsibility for the area beyond that which was already exercised would require the agreement of Egypt.
On 22nd February, the Secretary-General made a further statement to the General Assembly. He said that the takeover of Gaza from the military and civil control of Israel would be exclusively by U.N.E.F. in the first instance, and then—this a very important statement—he said that the Government of Egypt had expressed their willingness to make helpful arrangements with the United Nations.
After speaking of the deployment of the force and the assistance of the United Nations and its appropriate auxiliary bodies towards putting a definite end to the raids and incursions, the Secretary-General went on to say:
Furthermore, with reference to the period of transition, such other arrangements with the United Nations may be made as will contribute towards safeguarding life and property in the area by providing efficient and effective police protection as will guarantee good civilian administration, as will ensure maximum assistance to the United Nations refugee programme, and as will protect and foster the economic development of the territory and its people.
In other words, there is clearly contemplated a transition period during which the Government of Egypt have expressed their willingness to make helpful arrangements with the United Nations.
In his report to the General Assembly on 8th March, the Secretary-General quoted a declaration by the Commander of the United Nations Emergency Force that it had resumed responsibility for civil affairs in the Gaza Strip. The report went on to suggest that the choice of other measures to implement the task given to him in the second resolution of 2nd February had, in his view, been left to him.
The situation is still obscure. There are statements coming out at almost every hour from one side or the other as to what the position is. We can but hope that the United Nations will succeed in working out with both the Egyptian and the Israel Governments a pattern of administration in the area which will cover the transition period, and, we hope, last until there has been a permanent settlement.
But the latest news is disturbing. It appears that agitators in the Gaza strip have been inciting the local population, which otherwise welcomed the Emergency Force, to demonstrate in favour of Egypt. On 10th March, a crowd of demonstrators tried to force their way into the United Nations headquarters in Gaza. They had to be dispersed. Dr. Bunche, of the Secretariat, who was out there, first of all stated that there were no casualties, but subsequently it has transpired that one man was killed.
Nevertheless, it appeared at one time that the Egyptian Government, apparently without consulting the United Nations. had declared their intention of taking over the Gaza civil administration forthwith. They have appointed a general as the Egyptian administrative director, and complained to the Secretary-General that the United Nations Emergency Force was exceeding its functions.
These actions would seem to have been inconsistent with the assurances given earlier to the Secretary-General on which he based his statement of 22nd February to the Assembly. I believe that the latest information, which has just reached me, has not made it quite so clear that it is the intention of the Egyptian Government immediately to take over the administration.

Mr. R. H. S. Crossman: May I ask the right hon. and learned Gentleman a question on that?
He says that the situation is not clear. Has he any comment to make on the report that Dr. Bunche observed that he was perfectly willing to collaborate in the take-over of the civil administration by Egypt? That is what I think alarms many of us in the House. I wonder whether the right hon. and learned Gentleman has an observation to make. I should have thought it was only too ominously clear what that might mean.

Mr. Lloyd: On that point, my latest information is that Dr. Bunche has denied categorically that he ever made any such statement. However, the Secretary-General is considering the matter now with his advisory committee and I understand that he is to go to the Middle East this week-end. I think we can wish him well, because I still believe that the international solution would be in the interests of both parties, and certainly as much in the interests of the Arab States as of Israel.
Although the Israel Prime Minister has stated that Israel has no territorial ambitions, the Arabs remain fearful of Israeli attack and Israeli expansionism, and one way for them to have the position secure in a critical area would be for the United Nations to assume responsibility. Some people take a very pessimistic view of the situation. However, perhaps I might quote from a leading article in The Times, of 12th March:
The United Nations—fumbling, divided, fearful of responsibility—left the gates to Gaza open, and Egypt has driven a horse and cart through…a great opportunity has been missed. For years Gaza was the hot-bed of disturbances…Its 200,000 refugees were already a United Nations' responsibility. If it could have been administered as a whole by the United Nations for some time ahead, there would have been far greater security against raids and counter-raids between Israel and Egypt.
I think that the view expressed in that leading article will be widely shared, and I hope that that is a solution which, for some time ahead, at all events, will be achieved. So much for Gaza.
Now for the Gulf of Aqaba. There is no doubt in my mind that the prevention of free passage through the Straits of Tiran has been a major cause of friction between Egypt and Israel. Again, in this matter we have made our views clear from time to time. We believe that this is an international waterway. The fact

that the entrance passes through the territorial waters of two neighbouring countries does not mean, in our view, that there is no right of free and innocent passage. And other maritime countries have indicated a similar approach.
For example, in a declaration by the United States Government on 11th February it was stated:
…the Gulf comprehends international waters, and that no nation has the right to prevent free and innocent passage in the Gulf and through the Straits giving access thereto.
In that statement by the United States Government, reference was made to a communication made by the Egyptian Government on 28th January, 1950. At that time, the Egyptians, after occupying the two islands of Tiran and Senafir at the entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba, said:
This occupation being in no way conceived in the spirit of obstructing in any way innocent passage through the stretch of water separating these two islands from the Egyptian coast of Sinai, it follows that this passage, the only practical one, will remain free as in the past in conformity with international practice and recognised principles of the law of nations.
The United States Government statement went on to say that the United States was prepared to exercise the right of free and innocent passage and to join with others to secure general recognition of this right. On behalf of Her Majesty's Government my right hon. and gallant Friend the Minister of State made a similar statement to the General Assembly on 4th March, saying that Her Majesty's Government will assert this right on behalf of British shipping and that they are prepared to join with others to secure general recognition of this right. That is where we stand. I hope that there will not be difficulty about that matter.
Now I come to the Suez Canal. So far as——

Mr. R. T. Paget: Before the right hon. and learned Gentleman leaves that point, may I ask whether his statement means that if there is obstruction we shall send a warship through?

Mr. Lloyd: I think it would be most unwise for me to enter into any public discussion of the measures which might have to be taken. But certainly, we shall stand by that declaration and we shall


consult with our allies about the means of giving effect to it.
So far as the Suez Canal is concerned, it would appear that work is beginning on the last wreck obstructing the channel. General Wheeler has said that it will be open to traffic by 10th April. Nothing has happened during these clearing operations which causes me to change my view, or the estimate which I gave in January, that had the Anglo-French salvage fleet been allowed to go on with the task straight away from 6th November onwards the Canal would have been cleared by the end of January.
The subsequent delay has been due, in part, to the slow start made by the United Nations Salvage Organisation. That was not altogether its fault, because it had to mobilise its resources and create an organisation. On the other hand, a considerable proportion of the delay has been due to deliberate tactics on the part of the Egyptian Government.
This has involved considerable hardship for the Arab States, like Saudi Arabia, Iraq and the States of the Persian Gulf. It has adversely affected Moslem countries like Pakistan and Iran; and it has adversely affected India, apart from the effect on Western Europe. Egyptian action in delaying the press of clearance, for obvious political reasons, has given a great impulse to moves for alternative means for effecting the transit of oil. So far as a long-term settlement is concerned——

Mr. Philip Noel-Baker: Mr. Philip Noel-Baker (Derby, South) rose—7—

Mr. Lloyd: If I may just finish with the Canal, I will then give way to the right hon. Gentleman.
I believe there is, nevertheless, a basis for a long-term settlement of the Canal problem. Egypt has already declared her intention to abide by the 1888 Convention. Egypt has accepted the six principles unanimously passed by the Security Council on 13th October: free and open transit without discrimination; the sovereignty of Egypt should be respected; the operation of the Canal should be insulated from the politics of any one country; tolls and charges should be fixed by agreement; a fair proportion of the dues should go to development; and unresolved disputes between the Canal Company and the Egyptian Government to go to arbitration. If the

Egyptian Government will accept all these principles, I believe that agreement can be achieved.
In the exchange of letters between the Secretary-General and Dr. Fawzi, on 24th October and 2nd November, Egypt indicated her willingness to negotiate a final settlement. But I think that the fact must be faced by any Egyptian Government that the confidence of the users of the Canal was impaired by their action of 26th July, and has been further weakened by Egyptian interference, for political reasons, with the process of clearance. I think it is widely felt that the Government of Egypt intend to use their physical control of the Canal to exercise political pressure on the States with which they have differences.
That is a matter upon which, I think, in the interests of the Egyptian Government themselves, they have to make clear their position, because the prosperity of the Canal is an important element in the economy of Egypt. Benefit comes not only from the Canal tolls, but from the indirect revenue from the services supplied to ships, from tourists and the rest of it. If the Canal is to be developed, it can be done only by foreign capital. That development will directly benefit the Egyptian Government, and if Egypt will not enter into reasonable arrangements, her action will be self-defeating. All the other nations of the world will be driven the more quickly to provide alternatives—larger tankers, pipelines, and so on.
In the meantime, before that final settlement is reached—though I think it obvious that no final settlement can be reached before the Canal is opened—there has to be some sort of interim settlement. We have sought to obtain an interim agreement which would take effect immediately, and would safeguard the interests of the Canal users for the future. With that object certain proposals were conveyed to the Secretary-General of the United Nations last month, from the Governments of the United States, France, Norway and the United Kingdom, and Mr. Hammarskjold has communicated those proposals to Egypt. There have been reports, some contradictory, in the Press about Egypt's reception of these proposals and Mr. Hammarskjold, although he has asked more than once, has not yet received any official reply from Cairo.
I am aware that British shipowners wish to have a clear indication of the view of Her Majesty's Government on this problem before they decide whether to send their ships through the Canal again. Our attitude will be determined in consultation with the other three Governments, and also the Governments of other user countries, and after taking into account the views of the Users' Association. But I think that in this matter the important thing is to try to establish, both in the interim period and for the final settlement, some arrangement which will command the confidence of the users, as well as have due respect for the legitimate interests of Egypt. Now I will give way to the right hon. Gentleman.

Mr. P. Noel-Baker: The Foreign Secretary has repeated what he has said before, that the major part of the blame for the delay in opening the Canal is due to the United Nations—[HON. MEMBERS: "No."] Was it not——

Mr. Lloyd: Mr. Lloyd indicated dissent.

Mr. Noel-Baker: The work of the United Nations did not begin until the end of December. Was not that due to the fact that the United Nations Resolution has always made plain that clearance of the Canal could not begin until the British and French troops had been brought away? Did not the Foreign Secretary vote for a Resolution which said that on 24th November? Was not the delay, therefore, mainly due to the fact that we took seven weeks to bring our troops away?

Mr. Lloyd: I said specifically at the beginning of my speech that I did not want to go into controversies. May I repeat what I said? I said that the subsequent delay was due in part to the slow start made by the United Nations Salvage Organisation, which was not altogether the fault of the organisation, because it had to mobilise resources and create an organisation. But to say that I was suggesting that the major part of the delay was due to the United Nations is not correct.
I will pass on, if I may, to the wider issues beyond the specific matters of Gaza, the Straits of Aqaba and the Canal. I think that the events of October, and November have given a new opportunity

for the settlement of some of the more permanent problems. Obviously, that will depend on how matters work out over these specific issues with which I have been dealing, but we think that the basis for a settlement between the Arab States and Israel is along the following lines.
First, there must be guarantees to the Arab States against Israeli territorial expansion. That is a very real fear in the minds of many Arabs. Secondly, there must be guarantees to Israel against extermination. The United Nations accepted the creation of the State of Israel, and it cannot, it seems to me, permit its destruction. Thirdly, there must be compromise settlements on the following matters: refugees, frontiers and water. Fourthly, and meanwhile, preservation of peace on the frontiers is essential. Many people seem to think that all was peaceful and quiet in October last. Nothing is further from the facts.
The right hon. Member for Ebbw Vale (Mr. Bevan), writing in the News of the World on 24th February, stated:
The relations between Israel and Egypt before the Anglo-French attack were loaded with menace. Raids and counter-raids on peaceful civilians had become almost daily events. It was clear to anyone who took the trouble to study the situation that war was bound to break out if nothing was done to separate the combatants.
I have already told the House on a previous occasion how, between 10th September and 10th October last year, 160 men, women and children were killed on the frontier of Israel and Jordan alone. I believe that hon. Members on both sides of the House would agree that, above all, we have to prevent such a situation developing again.
Ground for hope lies in the constitution of the United Nations Emergency Force. If we are to prevent that serious situation from being re-created it is important that the United Nations Force should stay there. Therefore, it is in the interests of both sides that there should be some give and take with regard to the stationing and functions of the Emergency Force.

Mr. Aneurin Bevan: I believe that the right hon. and learned Gentleman has had notice of the fact that I might ask him this question. On 7th March he took part in a broadcast in which he appears to have revived the fears which were aroused by a speech made by


Sir Anthony Eden, in 1955. Sir Anthony Eden then said:
Well, as you know, one side says that it must be the 1947 line and the other says that it must be the 1948 line.
In his Guildhall speech, Sir Anthony Eden stated that his belief was that we had to have some form of compromise.

Major H. Legge-Bourke: How right he was.

Mr. Bevan: Do we understand that the right hon. and learned Gentleman is once more reviving fears about the line?

Mr. Lloyd: I think—and I believe that anyone who has seen them would think—that the present frontiers between Israel and the Arab States are nonsense. Anyone who has made the journey from Tel-Aviv to Jerusalem must realise that there cannot be permanent peace with the present demarcation line.
I have been very careful not to specify the nature of the compromise—how much should be given or taken by either side—but that there must be a compromise, and that those frontiers must be redrawn. I am certain.

Mr. Bevan: There has never been any doubt about this at all. Neither Israel nor anyone else who has made any comment upon the matter, so far as I know, has ever denied that there must be a mutually agreed rectification of the frontier lines. But it has been stated with the utmost firmness by Israel that she cannot agree to the surrender of any substantial parts of her territory. Does the right hon. and learned Gentleman revive fears that that might be the Government's view?

Mr. Lloyd: I do not believe that it is possible to arrive at a permanent settlement except by agreement, and it seems to me that that ought to cover the position of both sides. I am not talking of an imposed settlement in any sense, but it is in the interests of both sides that there should be some give and take over this matter, because these frontiers have to be rectified. It is in the interests of one side to give in one place, and the other to give in another place.

Mr. Bevan: Hear, hear.

Mr. Lloyd: Certainly, there is no suggestion that this means sacrifices of

territory by one side alone. There must be a compromise solution with regard to the frontiers.

Mr. Bevan: I do not want to return to this matter in my speech; I would rather have it cleared up now. [Interruption.] I am quite prepared to do so, however, if hon. Members want me to. I want to have it clear from the right hon. and learned Gentleman that, in his reference to the speech of Sir Anthony Eden, he is not desiring to arouse today the fears that that speech aroused then.

Mr. Lloyd: I do not want to arouse any fears. I want to arouse some hope for a permanent settlement, and I think that both sides will have to realise that we shall not get peace there unless Israel has more sensible frontiers.

Mr. Sydney Silverman: Will not the right hon. and learned Gentleman look again at the phraseology he used when he said that there ought to be guarantees? The first point he made was that the Arabs were entitled to be guaranteed against any territorial ambitions by Israel—and I make no comment upon that.
But his second point was that Israel was entitled to be guaranteed against extermination. Is that really all? Is it not to be guaranteed in its territorial integrity, subject to frontier rectification? Is it not to be guaranteed recognition as a State upon the same basis—[Interruption.] It is extremely difficult to make myself heard. It takes very much longer when there is this childish background of catcalls going on.
Is Israel not to be guaranteed, further, that there shall be no continuance of the economic blockade, which is bound to lead to further unrest, and the interference with the passage, across neighbouring territories, of people who happen to be Jews?

Hon. Members: Speech.

Mr. Speaker: Order. The House is getting a little impatient with the length of the intervention. [HON. MEMBERS: "We are not."] Hon. Members on one side of the House may not be, but I am concerned with both sides. If the hon. Member can put his point shortly I am sure that the House will listen.

Mr. Silverman: If you think that I am taking too long in putting what I consider to be an extremely important point, Mr. Speaker, I can only say in self-defence that it may sound a great deal longer if you add to the number of minutes I have taken the number of minutes taken up by interruptions. I certainly have no desire to debate the matter at this moment but, if I may say so with the greatest respect, my intervention would have been over in half the time that it took me to make it if I had received the same protection as that which is being given to those who have interrupted.

Mr. Lloyd: I said that the Arab States should be guaranteed against Israeli expansion, and I then used a phrase which has been in the mouths of certain Arabs, about the extermination of the State of Israel. I said that, the State of Israel having been created, we could not permit its destruction. When a frontier settlement has been made any guarantee must include guarantees of the frontiers for both sides. That point should be made clear. I believe that all the other matters referred to by the hon. Gentleman are necessary ingredients of a final settlement.
I now come to an exercise in politics, namely, the Soviet Note about the Middle East. In our view, that Note was a propaganda exercise. It was published almost immediately after its delivery, and it contained attacks upon Western policy which were obviously designed for popular consumption. Any idea that the Note was a serious diplomatic initiative is, in our view, quite misconceived. Had the Soviet Union meant business they would have approached us in different terms and by different methods. The Soviet Note contained the enunciation of certain principles, admirable in themselves but which the Soviet Union have not been observing.
The suggestion was made of a ban on arms to all countries in the Middle East by the four great Powers. That would have left it open to the Soviet Union to continue its present practice of supplying huge quantities of arms through the satellites. On the question of the supply of arms to the Middle East, all that the Soviet Union has to do to reduce tension in the area is to exercise the same restraint over the supply of arms as we have done

over a period of years. The Note took no account of the rights of Middle Eastern States. Whether they approved of the ban on arms, the liquidation of bases or the dissolution of alliances was, apparently, a matter of indifference to the Soviet Union.
In our reply we stated the facts, having regard to the views of our allies in the Bagdad Pact. This reply is not a rejection of the principles contained in the Soviet Note. As we say in the last paragraph of our reply, if the Soviet Union will conduct itself in a manner conforming to the general aims set out in its Note, that will be a major contribution to peace.
Co-operation, however, between us must be based upon confidence and good faith. We have not great confidence in the professions of the Soviet Union in that area. Therefore, in those circumstances, I think that we are right not to get entangled in their propaganda exercises. There are many difficulties ahead. Obviously——

Mr. Shinwell: What is the right hon. and learned Gentleman going to say about America?

Mr. Lloyd: Perhaps the right hon. Gentleman will listen for a moment. I was saying that, obviously, there are many difficulties ahead. There is plenty of room for anxiety at present. There are the bitter resentment of the Arab States against Israel, the great inequalities of wealth in the area, the emotional nationalism of the Arab world, the extent of Communist penetration, and the fact that it is impossible for any Government to accept huge quantities of Soviet arms without becoming tied to Soviet policy. Those are the difficulties.
On the other hand, there are certain hopeful features. There may be some controversy about this, but I think that events have diminished the underlying desire for hostilities and the belief that they are inevitable. I think that over the years there has been, in certain quarters, an underlying desire to bring the matter to the issue of arms. I think that events have removed that desire and that it no longer exists. The belief that war is inevitable is no longer there.
Secondly, the United Nations has been put in the position that all its members must realise that its prestige will be


vitally affected if it does not procure at all events an easement in the situation. I do not think that all members of the United Nations want its prestige fatally to suffer. I believe that there are certain people who, over an issue like Hungary, for example, did not care whether the prestige of the United Nations suffered or not, but the majority of members of the United Nations do not wish it to fail in this issue. That is a hopeful feature.
Thirdly, there is more chance than before for the alignment of Western policies, both short-term and long-term. I think that the United States is now more conscious of the difficulties in the area; that fact has been demonstrated by the Eisenhower doctrine, which we welcome. Greater thought is being given to the overall economic problems of the area and there is no doubt that the cooperation of Iran. Iraq, Pakistan and Turkey within the framework of the Bagdad Pact has been a substantial stabilising factor in the area. That is also one of the hopeful features.
I fully acknowledge that those hopes may well be frustrated if one or all of these immediate problems cannot be faced and overcome. The test of this is whether those who brought such pressure to bear upon us, upon France and upon Israel, will face the facts of the situation and undertake a proper share of responsibility for securing a solution. We certainly shall try to play our part. It is wrong for anyone to underestimate the extent to which we can help.

4.24 p.m.

Mr. Aneurin Bevan: While the issue is still fresh in our minds I should like to revert—I am sorry to have to do so—to the interrogation that just took place about the statement made by the Foreign Secretary in the course of a B.B.C. interrogation. I find his statement today still unsatisfactory. We would like to have it cleared up.
The right hon. and learned Gentleman must know that the issue that was raised by Sir Anthony Eden was that he thought there should be a compromise between the 1947 line and the 1948 line. That means that Israel will be expected to surrender territory. That is the clear meaning of it. For instance, he said:
Thirdly, there has got to be a compromise on the permanent frontiers between the Arab States and Israel.

Was all he meant by that what we have always agreed, that there should be a rectification of the absurdities of the frontier line as it existed when the armies stopped? There are houses on one part of the line and gardens belonging to the houses on the other part. All of us who have walked along those frontiers know how absurd they are. Israel has always made it clear that she desired rectification of the line, which means a compromise by going back here and going forward there merely to make a sensible line. We say now that there can be no compromise on the frontiers of Israel as between the 1947 and 1948 lines. That is quite clear. Does the right hon. and learned Gentleman stand there? Let us have an answer.

Mr. Selwyn Lloyd: The answer is what I said in my speech. I have answered the question of the right hon. Gentleman about four times. If he will study HANSARD he will see that the answer is quite clear. There is nothing sinister about this, and those who suggest it do their country a very ill service. [HON. MEMBERS: "Hear, hear."] Once again, what we want is a settlement between the two sides. I still take the view that there must be a compromise on frontiers if there is to be that settlement. I have never been so foolish as to say how much territory one side or the other would have to give up.

Hon. Members: Hear, hear.

Mr. Bevan: Government supporters ought not to cheer a Minister whenever he suggests that what has been said on this side is deleterious to the welfare of the country when, of course, the Suez maniacs were the patriots. [Interruption.] If Government supporters want to have this debate conducted in the best interests of the nation they should be a little hit more restrained in their conduct. It does not come well from guilty people to misbehave in the dock.
The right hon. and learned Gentleman has left the matter still obscure. I am only anxious to make it clear. The right hon. and learned Gentleman's language is clear. He returned to it on two occasions. He revived it deliberately—unless what he said was off-the-cuff, in which case we are prepared for him to say that the language was not particularly felicitous. If it was deliberate, then he has revived the same fear today as


Sir Anthony Eden did in the speech before, and the right hon. and learned Gentleman should take an early opportunity of putting it right. If he does not, what does he once more do? This is why we are anxious about it. He arouses Arab expectations and stimulates Israeli fears. He once more helps to create the impression, wittingly or unwittingly, that the Arabs can still gain substantially at the expense of existing Israeli territory. [HON. MEMBERS: "No."] Really, hon. Members are not doing themselves justice.
If all that the right hon. and learned Gentleman meant by what he said is that he thinks that there should be a rectification, mutually agreed, to remove the anomalies of the existing frontier, he only has to say that and it is all finished. The right hon. and learned Gentleman has not said it, and hon. Members know very well that he has not said it. I hope that he will return to it and make the position rather clearer than his speech today, accompanied by his broadcast remarks, leaves it.
The right hon. and learned Gentleman started his speech, I thought, by almost beginning to trail his coat. He said that he has not changed his views about the events of last year. I am not sure which of them he has not changed. He has so many of them at so many different times, and it is not quite clear to us on this side where he stands. Of course, the Government may stand where they did, but the territory on which they are taking their stand is dwindling day by day, as the by-election results have shown.
The right hon. and learned Gentleman comes to the House of Commons today and says to us that, as far as major policy is concerned, the Government are unrepentant. They stand exactly where they were last year. I hope that we shall not discuss that any more today, because the country is discussing it and the verdict is being given as the days pass. It would be a very great mistake if hon. Members imagine that the country will forget; it will not. On the contrary, the full significance of what was done is now being learned by the country.
In my view, it would not be a good thing or in the interests of this nation or the peace of the world for any Minister or other Member of Parliament to

spend what time he has in this House merely making derogatory remarks about the United Nations or just sneering at the United Nations because it was not more precise. The fact, as has been said so often, is now becoming clear. The United Nations is what the member States make it, and we were not particularly helpful. The United Nations was faced with a very difficult and delicate situation, which it tried to resolve. It could not accept the situation that Israel should benefit by an act of aggression. Though we may have understood why Israel did what she did, nevertheless it was perfectly sound United Nations doctrine that a nation should not have any advantage from an act of aggression.
At the same time, it was also quite clear that it would be quite intolerable if the situation in that area merely relapsed to the state it was in before the act of aggression. This was a difficult situation, and we had an exchange of views between the two sides in the House of Commons, and I thought that we had reached agreement; that is to say, we believe that the withdrawal of the Israeli forces from the Gaza Strip should be accompanied by the establishment of conditions there which would not give rise to the circumstances existing before the attack. In other words, the two operations should take place simultaneously, and both sides would save their faces. Neither side would be asked to make concessions to the other.
This had to be done by means of a device which, of its very nature, lends itself to ambiguity and obscurity, because the United Nations could not lay down in its Resolution the precise circumstances that would be imposed upon the previous belligerents without appearing at least to accept the view that Israel was laying down conditions for withdrawal, and, therefore, they proceeded by what I must admit was a highly dangerous device—that certain assumptions could be accepted and that Israel could have faith in certain expectations. We may say that that is not a very good method at all, but, at the time, it seemed to be one of the most agreeable and the only one upon which a resolution could be accepted.
Therefore, what we have to do today, in my view, if we want to be helpful, is not to deride the ambiguity of the expectations but to underline their


authority, because it must be accepted that Israel physically acted on the basis of those assumptions. She withdrew, and, therefore, by that very act, attached as much tangibility to the promise made as could possibly have been made in the circumstances. On both sides of the House, I think that we expect that the United Nations will see to it that Israel's act of courageous faith will not go unrequited.
It would be an appalling event, in my view. It would strike a blow at the confidence of statesmen all over the world if Mr. Ben-Gurion, who took his political life in his hands in persuading his countrymen to retreat on these conditions, now finds himself faced with what could only be described as an act of faithlessness on the part of those who persuaded him to do what he did.
It is also essential for us to point out to Egypt that the whole world has the right to expect from Egypt obedience to these expectations, because, after all, she was the beneficiary of the United Nations intervention. The troops were removed from her soil—French, British and Israeli troops—at the request of the United Nations, and, therefore, if there is one nation in the world which should be grateful now to the United Nations it is Egypt.
It would, therefore, seem to us to be reasonable that, of all the nations, Egypt should be permitted to co-operate to the utmost in maintaining the position in the Gaza Strip. Indeed, Mr. Hammarskjöld himself informed the United Nations in the report subsequently adopted as a resolution that he had received assurances from Egypt to that effect. So we are not merely faced now with a certain private arrangement, but faced also with the statement by the Secretary-General, and embodied in the resolution, that Egypt has promised to co-operate with the United Nations in preventing a recurrence of hostile acts. Quite frankly, it seems to us, if I may use a figure of speech which is not very elegant, that the ball is in Egypt's court. We now have to wait to see what she will do, and I have said earlier that the best thing is for us to expect her to behave herself.
About the Gulf of Aqaba, the position appears to be much clearer. It will, indeed, be unforgivable if, after all this, shipping is interfered with in the Gulf.
I should have thought that the right thing to do was not to send a warship. I should have thought the right thing to do was to take immediate advantage of any civil commerce that could be conducted in the Gulf to send civilian ships there as quickly as possible, to assert the right of maritime nations to innocent passage in the Gulf and to do it at once—not to wait for an aggressive act like sending a warship out, but to act on the assumption that the United Nations has laid down, which has been underwritten by us and by the United States, and to which, I should have thought, a nation could not take any exception at all.
I should have thought that the right thing to do was for the Israeli Government to be able to obtain, at once, the full resumption of normal commercial undertakings that existed before the act of belligerency. In other words, she should be able to enjoy such commercial credits as are necessary for the exchange of goods and any other economic assistance that we were prepared to give before. In other words, it seems to us that what we should do, in every way we possibly can, is to try to prevent the re-creation of the circumstances as they existed before the outbreak of violence.
Now, about the Suez Canal. Of course, it may be quite impossible for Egypt to say that she is going to do now what she did not do before. It may be that if President Nasser were asked to agree to Israeli shipping using the Gulf or to Israeli shipping going through the Canal, he would be asked to admit defeat. That would be difficult for him to explain to his friends in the Arab world, because then they would want to know from him what he had gained by his original act of seizure. But what we do expect is that Egypt shall behave as though she accepts the fact that innocent passage through the Canal is an international concern to which she herself should be obedient.
We have stated our views on this side of the House over and over again. It does not seem to us, whatever the law might be, that there is any reason why the law should not be brought into accord with international realities. The overriding international reality is that nations should be permitted rights of innocent passage through the Canal, Israel as well as every other nation in the world. It also is our view that if Israel tries to send ships


through the Canal, and they are stopped, Egypt will be using the Canal for political purposes.
This is a matter in which, in our view, the good faith of the United Nations is involved, because it does not seem to us that Egypt can defend such a position. She cannot, on the one hand, call for the withdrawal of Israeli troops from her territory and, at the same time, behave as though she is in a state of war with Israel. She must accept one position or another. The two positions together are untenable. Whatever may be the political reasons why Egypt cannot say that in so many terms, there is every reason why she should behave as if it is so, and, therefore, we are expecting that the Canal shall be free for passage.
Once having said that, however, we cannot express equal concern about the ownership of the Canal.

Mr. Godfrey Nicholson: I agree with every word that the right hon. Gentleman has said so far about the Canal. He has spoken of what we expect from Egypt. If Egypt does not fulfil those expectations, however, what would the right hon. Gentleman do then? That is the interesting point.

Mr. Bevan: There is nothing more foolish in public life than to imagine all the various alternatives that may happen and then try to find an answer to each one of them. We cannot go into negotiations with anybody with a shillelagh in one hand and an olive branch in the other. They cancel each other out. The best thing we can do is to behave as though the other fellow will be as decent as we hope we will be.

Mr. Shinwell: This is a matter of vital importance. It is the whole crux of the problem. Would my right hon. Friend not agree that if Colonel Nasser does not respond to what he describes as the correct international relationships—my right hon. Friend has stated the position very well, and I agree with every word of it—surely, then, the responsibility rests fairly and squarely on the shoulders of the United Nations?

Mr. Bevan: I thought that I had said that. I thought that I had made it quite clear. [An HON. MEMBER: "The right

hon. Gentleman dodged it."] No. If hon. Members would do me the honour of reading what I have said, I said precisely that. [HON. MEMBERS: "No."] If I did not do it, I will say it now. It is the responsibility of the United Nations to see that freedom of innocent passage through the Canal is accorded to all nations, Israel included. I did not want to weary the House with repetition. That is the position as I understand it.
In reply to the intervention, I would say that if we are to consider what would happen in the event of this series of negotiations failing we shall live with calamity three times—one in anticipation, one in realisation and the other in recollection. It is far better now that we should imagine we will be sensible.
Now I come to another aspect of the matter. I think that my right hon. and hon. Friends on this side were woefully disappointed by what could only be described as the barrenness of the last part of the Foreign Secretary's statement. I was rather alarmed by the note of what I thought almost complacency which crept into his speech. The right hon. and learned Gentleman thought that the prospects of war had receded. I do not know what made them recede. That is precisely what the right hon. and learned Gentleman said, that the prospects of peace were higher. I wish I could take that view. I wish I could take the view that because we are in the immediate aftermath of a piece of folly, similar folly will not be repeated. I cannot see that at all. It may be that for a while the clouds are dispersed, but they might easily gather, because all the elements that led to the previous outburst are still there. They have not been removed.
It may be that the authority of the United Nations, if we are faithful to our duty, will be asserted more self-confidently, but the major problems are still there. We on this side would like to see the whole problem tackled purposively over a long period of time when there is no immediate act of violence being committed in order to anticipate what might eventually occur.
What is our main interest in the Middle East? Our primary interest is not to secure the alliance of any Middle Eastern countries. It is to secure the uninterrupted flow of oil.

Mr. Anthony Fell: Surely there is something much more permanent than oil: that is, human beings and, indeed, races. Surely it is much more important to ally ourselves, if we can, with the nation that will be the strongest nation in the Middle East.

Mr. Bevan: I said that as a nation our primary interest in the Middle East is oil. We believe that oil can only be secured from the Middle East if the Middle East is at peace. We do not believe that the Middle East can ever be at peace if it is regarded as an area for plotting between the great Power blocs. We believe that oil can be secured and the peace of the Middle East preserved only if we try to adopt an entirely new policy, a policy entirely different from the one we have followed in the past.
Surely, what last year proved was that oil cannot be secured by an act of war. It can be lost by war, but not preserved by war. It is quite correct to say that some other nation, by an act of war, could stop us having the oil. All that that means is that we both do not get the oil. But what stands out overwhelmingly clearly, I should have thought, is that this particular commodity cannot be obtained, and we cannot ensure its passage to us, by any other than civic means, by commercial negotiation, by the pacification of the area and by preventing national quarrels in the area from being blown up. It is the only way in which it can be done.

Viscount Hinchingbrooke: That is what we did.

Mr. Bovan: The noble Lord endears himself to us by his idiosyncrasies and a certain capacity for being off the beam. Nobody would suggest that as a means of obtaining the oil our policy was particularly successful.
If it be the fact, therefore, that what we ought to be doing in the Middle East is to try to create conditions which will preserve and ensure the passage of oil, then we ought to consider why it is that we have not been so successful. I should have thought that the reason is that we have not recognised that Middle East nations will not permanently accept a subordinate position. Nationalism in the Middle East is so much a feature of the whole area that no nation there will accept the status of a second-class nation.
The national independence of the Middle East and of the States in the Middle East is, therefore, a sine qua non for us getting the oil from them and for the peace of the area, but, at the same time, unfortunately, the Middle East nations are exceedingly poor and the standard of living is exceedingly low, and it is necessary that those nations should receive economic help from the outside world.
How can economic help be provided in the Middle East without subordinating the nation States of the Middle East to an inferior status? That is the problem. We did not face it. We have just heard today that the Treaty between us and Jordan has been wound up. We provided very large sums of money to Jordan, but the provision of large sums of money——

Mr. John Hynd: And military help.

Mr. Bevan: —and military help, by Great Britain to Jordan, did not help us. Even if it had been accompanied, as it was now and again, by economic aid, it would not have helped us either, because the bilateral relationship between us and Jordan put Jordan in a subordinate position in which the functions of her national economy became a function of our annual Budget. That is not a situation which, if it is extended to other nations in the Middle East, will preserve the peace there.
We have these three conditions: nationalism, fervent, perfervid nationalism, irridescent nationalism, poverty; and yet, at the same time, the necessity for the outside world to give economic help. I believe that the problem has to be approached from that point of view. How can the potentialities of the Middle East be developed and the standard of living of the Middle East be provided with sufficient anonymity that the patronage of no particular nation is seen to be at work? I believe that those are the elements of the problem. I am not saying that they are easy to tackle, but I do not believe that any nation, however rich, will be able to preserve the peace in the Middle East merely by substituting her patronage for ours.
Although, obviously, any economic aid is better than none at all, nevertheless I should have thought that our interests are deeply engaged in seeing to


it that such economic aid as can be provided reaches the Middle East without wounding their national pride.
I should have thought that there is only one way in which it can be done. We have done a very successful job within the limits of our resources under the Colombo Plan, and we have done a very successful job, in many instances, in Africa. I should have thought myself that the Government were not acting up to this magnitude of the problem when they summarily rejected the Soviet Note. What is the use of talking like that? For heaven's sake, what is the use of preaching homilies?
The right hon. and learned Gentleman was most Pecksniffian. He told us that he told the Russians that we would judge them by their behaviour. Does that come well from him? The right hon. and learned Gentleman ought to consider that the other fellow can answer him back. While I will not say a single word of commendation—on the other hand, I would say every single word of condemnation—of the conduct of Russia in Hungary, I would also say to the right hon. and learned Gentleman that as we visit other countries today we are made deeply aware of the extent to which the conduct of himself and his colleagues has reduced the status of Great Britain abroad. It is no use the right hon. and learned Gentleman and hon. Members opposite denying that.
The right hon. and learned Gentleman himself knows that to get the voice of Great Britain heard in the United States it has to be heard vicariously. We are no longer in the position where we were standing on our own feet, because the rejoinder comes straight from the mouth of the others before we have made our own speech. I myself should have thought that what we ought to have done was to have examined the Russian proposals for what they are worth.
Of course, they are accompanied by propaganda. So was our reply. In fact, it is becoming the habit now to make offers to other nations accompanied by all sorts of tendentious propaganda—and not only tendentious, either; often it becomes completely brutal and clear. I should have thought, therefore, that when the Russians said they were prepared to discuss with us the provision of economic

aid to the area, we ought to have jumped at it. We ought to have asked them what they meant by it. It was not necessary for us, at this stage, to assume that the winding up of all the treaties in the Middle East and the abolition of all bases immediately is a condition of an agreement; because that is far too ambitious a project to be realised in one bite. Nevertheless, it might have been possible for us to have reached agreement with them over an agency for the canalising of economic aid in the Middle East without the aid being tainted with any imperialism behind it.
It should have been possible for us here to have taken the initiative and to have called for the creation of a United Nations agency, charged with the responsibility of formulating plans for the Middle East and also of making those plans concrete. Those of us who have been to the Middle East, and have given time to the study of the problem, know very well that there are many plans in advanced stages of preparation. All that is needed is political co-operation and the money behind them. And should we not have very much better propaganda in the Middle East if our broadcasts were, day by day, stating the advantages of those plans for the people of the Middle East rather than the claims of this or that bloc of nations for the fidelity of this or that nation in the Middle East?
We have not made a positive approach to the problem at all. We recognised it and ran away. We wait for another emergency, and then react to that. This accusation is as true of the United States as it is of ourselves. It has been made by commentators in the United States. It is not enough all the while to wait for trouble to happen and then to try to put out the fire. It is our duty in this House to think of forward plans to deal with this problem.
Let me conclude by saying this. We are not entitled to expect the people of the Middle East to see wealth flowing from their countries indefinitely and to ask them to accept a standard of life lower than that which we ourselves enjoy. How are we to answer the problem? We cannot do so merely by doling out grants here and there and asking for assurances that, for the money received, they will be faithful allies. The only way, I am convinced, is to accept the


equality of the Middle East and of the countries of the Middle East; to accept their need for economic aid and to see that it reaches them without any of the taints of that imperialism against which they are now revolting.

5.0 p.m.

Sir Charles Mott-Radclyffe: The speech of the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Ebbw Vale (Mr. Bevan) ranged very wide. I sometimes wonder whether all the problems on which he touched are, in fact, quite so simple as he made them out to be. I am quite certain that he himself is not quite so guillible as he made out this afternoon. He talked about the Soviet plan for bringing economic assistance to the Middle East. What sort of economic assistance does he think that the Soviet Union is likely to be able to bring? The Soviet Union is already trying to undertake the supply of industrial equipment both to China and India at the same time. Does the right hon. Gentleman really think that it would also be in a position to provide, from its own industrial output, further equipment for the needs of the Middle East?
He used the phrase "through an international agency." I think he chose the phrase well, because what the Soviet Union in fact would do were it in a position, within the ambit of a United Nations agency, to provide any economic, or so-called economic assistance, to the Middle East, would be to use not the agency but agents who would infiltrate into the countries concerned; and in a very short time the Governments of several Middle East countries would have a very different political colour from what they have now.
Again, I did not really quite understand why he laboured so heavily the point about the frontier compromise. Having admitted that there must be a compromise on the frontiers between the Arab States and Israel, I do not myself quite understand the difference between frontier rectification and a compromise. It seems merely to be splitting hairs. In any case, the fact is that there are not any proper frontiers at all. If my recollection is correct, there are no frontiers in the strict sense but only an armistice line, which the Egyptians, for their part, have never accepted, because they have never accepted the armistice settlement.
That is the basis of their claim that a state of war still exists between themselves and Israel.
The right hon.Gentleman spoke of driving from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. That drive itself makes nonsense of the existing so-called frontiers or the so-called demarcation line, and he admitted that the line will have to be altered so that individual holdings are not bisected by a so-called frontier. If he admits that, he must admit a rectification of the so-called frontier, which means a compromise. I do not know why he wanted to labour this point quite so much.

Mr. Bevan: If there is a quibble, it was first of all created by the hon. Member's former leader, Sir Anthony Eden.

Sir C. Mott-Radclyffe: I remember the speech. I remember listening to it on the wireless and reading it later. I also listened recently to my right hon. and learned Friend the Foreign Secretary in "Radio Link", and, from what the right hon. Gentleman himself said, I could not understand why he thought that either my right hon. and learned Friend the other day or Sir Anthony Eden three years ago had ever suggested anything other than a compromise on the demarcation line, which is a quite artificial one between Israel and her Arab neighbours.

Mr. Bevan: No, the hon. Gentleman has not got it.

Sir C. Mott-Radclyffe: What we are really discussing this afternoon is whether or not the United Nations, under the leadership of the United States, is capable of solving the problems of the Suez Canal area. If the United Nations fails to ensure the free passage of ships of all nations through the Canal; if Gaza is again to become a base for further guerilla operations against Israel; if no progress is to be made over the question of refugees, and if we are to revert to what the right hon. Gentleman rightly called the status quo ante, then, whatever the merits and aspirations of the United Nations, I am afraid that we shall have to admit that it is not capable, as at present constituted, of dealing with the sort of international situation now persisting in the Suez Canal area.

Mr. Fell: When my hon. Friend says if the United Nations is riot capable of dealing with raids across the frontier,


is he aware that already there have been at least six such raids across the frontier—in fact, I believe there have been far more—and that all of them have been through the United Nations lines?

Sir C. Mott-Radclyffe: I was coming to that point. I was about to say that, to be quite frank about it, the omen that the United Nations is capable of settling these problems is not so good. I was about to refer to the raids that have already taken place through the U.N.E.F. lines up to now.
It must seem to many that the United Nations Emergency Force has really been nothing more than the tool of Egypt. It has done for the Egyptians what the Egyptian Army could not do, namely, to get the Israelis out of Egyptian territory. Colonel Nasser has dictated the pace at which the Canal is to be cleared, and has also said which ships of what nations are to be used in the salvage work. He claims that U.N.E.F. is in Egyptian territory only by kind invitation.
Here, I think, we come up against one of the rocks on which, hitherto, all attempts at action by the United Nations have foundered. It is this problem of national sovereignty. The United Nations is composed of a large number of nations which have not by reason of their membership of the United Nations in actual fact abrogated by one single degree their own national sovereignty, and nobody has been able to define at all clearly the precise legal basis for any United Nations action.
This is half the difficulty. The whole position of U.N.E.F., if Egypt likes to stand on the narrow letter of national law, absolutely bristles with difficulties. The Yugoslav Government are reported as saying that if the Egyptians are claiming that U.N.E.F. is exceeding the instructions given by the United Nations, they will withdraw their contingent.

Mr. Bevan: Is it enough to point out that the United Nations has difficulties? Of course it will have difficulties. Did we have none in the Canal Zone? Are we having none in Cyprus?

Sir C. Mott-Radclyffe: As the main burden of the right hon. Gentleman's speech was that all these problems could be solved by U.N.O., it is only fair to

point out some of the practical difficulties involved.

Mr. Bevan: I never said there were none.

Sir C. Mott-Radclyffe: When the right hon. Gentleman was asked what he would do in certain circumstances, he said "Do not let us worry about future difficulties until they arise."

Mr. Bevan: I did not say that either.

Sir C. Mott-Radclyffe: What will happen if the Egyptians should try to prevent the passage of an Israeli ship up the Gulf of Aqaba? Of course, the situation is full of difficulties. The whole status of U.N.E.F. in Gaza bristles with difficulties because nobody knows to what extent sovereign rights are being infringed. But this is the organisation on which the United States is endeavouring to base its policy in the Canal area. I am not certain that the United States would base its policy exclusively on the United Nations in any other part of the world where it thought its vital interests were involved. I rather wonder.
Much as I like the Americans, if there were some trouble in Panama or in the Far East, in a part which was of vital interest to the United States, I doubt whether they would necessarily obey to the last letter everything that the United Nations General Assembly said. I am not so sure.
When the right hon. Gentleman talks about action through the United Nations, he must make sure that he knows exactly what he is proposing. Action in the Security Council is hamstrung by the veto. So far as the General Assembly is concerned, it works backwards and forwards on this mathematical formula of a two-thirds majority. As my right hon. Friend said in his broadcast the other evening, in order to get the two-thirds majority, nations vote on issues for which they have no responsibility whatever and not necessarily very much knowledge.
In any case, when there is a two-thirds majority decision in the General Assembly, if I understand the position correctly, it is not legally binding on anybody. There may be a moral obligation, but there is not a legal obligation. A two-thirds majority resolution in the General Assembly merely makes a recommendation. It is not binding on anybody.
In order to get a two-thirds majority now, with the extra number of members of the United Nations there is a new kind of hidden veto. The Afro-Asian bloc, aligned against any given resolution with the Communist bloc, can prevent any other group of nations from getting a two-thirds majority. It is, in fact, a veto. When Nehru refused to vote for a resolution in favour of United Nations observers in Hungary, it was because he did not want any U.N.O. observers in Kashmir. One cannot call that sort of organisation a supra-national moral authority.
There is one point we ought to note about the Israeli withdrawal. As the right hon. Gentleman said, the Israelis did not withdraw because they had an assurance from the United Nations. They withdrew because there was some kind of an unofficial assurance, or at least an assumption, given not from the United Nations but from the United States, that Gaza would not be allowed to be used again by the Egyptians as a base for further operations.
With regard to the British position, we certainly got an assurance from Mr. Hammarskjold, but it was an assurance given in writing by Mr. Hammarskjold to our representative at the United Nations, which appears to have been given to him verbally by Colonel Nasser. This is the position as I understand it.
My right hon. Friend the Foreign Secretary, in answer to a Question on 11th February, said:
Following is the text of a statement given to Sir Pierson Dixon by Mr. Hammarskjold on 1st December.
The answer went on to give the text, and explained that
Egypt has repeatedly reaffirmed its intention to implement freedom of passage as established in the 1888 Convention. There is, therefore, nothing that should cause us to believe that Egypt, after a withdrawal of the British and French forces, would interfere with British and French shipping through the Canal in violation of its undertakings under the convention."—[OFFICIAL REPORT, 11th February, 1957; Vol. 564, c. 905.]
That is because Egypt does not claim that we or France are at war with her. That is all right so far as it goes, but not long afterwards there was a report of a Press conference given by a Lebanese deputy named M. Bustani who is known to some of us in this House. I have not got the actual Press cutting with me,

but I do not think I am misquoting him when I say that when he was asked whether Colonel Nasser would discriminate against British and French shipping in the Canal M. Bustani said, in effect, that so far as British ships were concerned it would be all right, but that he was not so sure about the French because they had aligned themselves with Israel at the United Nations.
What is quite clear is that, whatever may be the legal difficulties, the United Nations is under a great moral obligation first to make certain that there is freedom of passage through the Canal of ships of all nations and, secondly, that neither Gaza nor Sinai can be used as bases for further Fedayeen operations against Israel. That is the immediate short-term objective which the United Nations must discharge on moral grounds, and nothing less than that would suffice.
So far as the longer-term objectives are concerned, first of all the United Nations must make one more effort to solve this problem of the refugees. Their condition is morally as well as physically bad. Year after year we are spending far more on relief in order to keep them alive than we are spending on resettlement. It is time that the United Nations made one more attempt to deal with this problem. I am well aware of the difficulties. I know that in one sense it is a kind of "hen and the egg" argument.
On the one hand, it can be argued that until the problem of the refugees is solved, we shall not get any political settlement between the Arab States and Israel. On the other hand, it is frequently argued by the Arab States that if the refugee problem were settled prior to a political settlement they would be giving away their main bargaining point.
The fact remains that the Arab States have used these unfortunate refugees as a kind of political pawn in this long drawn-out game. We should not mind whether it is the hen or the egg. We should not insist that there should be a settlement of the refugee problem before any other settlement. It does not matter which way round it is done, but negotiations afresh should be embarked upon about the refugee problem in conjunction with other negotiations for a longer-term settlement.
As regards the frontiers—I do not want to get involved in another argument with the right hon. Gentleman about this—I do not believe we can have a permanent settlement between Israel and her Arab neighbours when feeling on both sides of the frontiers is at boiling point. We must allow the temperature to drop a little, and the temperature cannot drop, nor can racial feelings become more reasonable, unless there is some international force between the two sides. That is why I am quite certain that the longer the U.N.E.F. can stay in Gaza and in Sinai to separate the two potential raiders, the better chance there will be for a long-term settlement of the frontier question.
Equally, there will be no settlement of these problems until the Israelis have a guarantee from the United Nations, in quite clear terms, against what Nasser has openly called a desire to obliterate Israel. They must have that. The Arab States are perfectly entitled to have a similar guarantee against further territorial expansion by Israel at the expense of the Arab States. There must also be some form of joint agreement about the use of the Jordan waters.
All these are difficult problems, but we have not much time to play with them. Feelings between Israelis and Arabs are running too high. I hope the United Nations can solve them. It must begin soon and must show that it is likely to be more successful than it has been hitherto. If it cannot solve them, we shall have to do some fresh thinking, and do it without delay.

5.23 p.m.

Mr. John Stonehouse: I should have liked during this debate to have made some comment on the events leading up to the closure of the Suez Canal and the economic results of the disastrous Suez war, particularly since these matters have been of intense concern and interest to my constituents. However, as this is my first speech in the House I wish to make it as non-controversial as possible in a debate on the Middle East.
During the speech of my right hon. Friend the Member for Ebbw Vale (Mr. Bevan), I detected agreement on all sides that the fundamental problem facing this country is the supply of oil. I should

like to refer to some of the import figures for oil, confirming what my right hon. Friend has said. In 1935, imports into this country of crude oil and refined petroleum products totalled 10 million tons. In 1945, the total had reached 16 million tons. In 1955, over 36 million tons of oil and oil products were imported. Our need for oil and oil products is great and is increasing.
The same applies to Europe's need and Europe's consumption of oil. In 1948, and each year since, the annual increase in consumption of O.E.E.C. countries has been no less than 14 per cent. In 1955, the consumption of O.E.E.C. countries became 98 million tons. According to the O.E.E.C. Oil Committee's Report published last September, it is estimated that overall oil consumption for the O.E.E.C. countries will rise to 150 million tons in 1960, and the probable demand in 1975 will be 335 million tons.
Where are there sufficient reserves to satisfy this tremendously increased demand for oil? The answer lies in the Middle East. The Middle East is the only part of the world which can satisfy this demand. We have it on the authority of the last report to a Congressional Committee of the United States investigating the problem a report presented by a Mr. Pratt, that over three-quarters of the proved reserves of oil outside the Soviet bloc are in the Middle East. The question is whether we can rely on the present organisation of the oil industry to safeguard our interests and protect the interests of the producing countries.
The experience of the last few years shows that we cannot. Oil in the Middle East is dominated by a few giant international oil combines buying concessions from feudal regimes and, with the exception of our shareholding in the British Petroleum Company, there is no element of public control. The situation is such that, for instance, in Saudi Arabia one company has obtained the major concessions to the years 1999 and 2005, covering an area of 450,000 square miles with twice the proved reserves of the whole of the United States. It is not in the best interests of the oil industry or the future of the Middle East for one company to have such tremendous, irresponsible economic power.
If we examine the price policy of these oil cartels, we gain some idea of the


danger to our economy and to free international trade. Production costs of Middle East oil are about one-third of those for North American oil, according to a Report published by the Economic Commission for Europe in March, 1955. But the price we as consumers pay for oil products is brought up to the Western hemisphere price, and there is no corresponding advantage to the producing countries. According to the Report of the Economic Commission for Europe to which I referred, the price charged on sales to European countries from the Middle East could be significantly lowered without adverse effects on the future development of crude oil production.
Another element which works against the interests of consumers in this country and in Western Europe generally is the stranglehold which the oil cartels have on transportation and on markets. Our only real chance to safeguard our interests is to work through the United Nations for an international oil convention which would supervise the operation of the oil companies and ban monopoly, ensure equal access to oil supplies and abolish price discrimination. Such a convention could ensure also that part of the profits from the exploitation of oil reserves is ploughed back in the development of the welfare of the people of the Middle East who live in conditions of absolute poverty.
I understand that the International Cooperative Alliance is seeking to place this question on the agenda of the 24th Session of the Economic and Social Council which opens in Geneva in July. It is to be hoped that the Alliance will succeed, for an international oil convention would be a real contribution towards securing our interests as consumers of oil, protecting the producing countries and alleviating tension, and would prove an important factor in the maintenance of peace in this vital area.

5.30 p.m.

Captain Charles Waterhouse: It is a great privilege to be able to congratulate the hon. Member for Wednesbury (Mr. Stonehouse) on an admirable maiden speech. He started by reminding the House that he must not be controversial. I can tell him quite definitely that there have been many controversial speeches made by his immediate predecessor in this House. The hon. Member made his speech with great

charm and had evidently taken great trouble to acquaint himself of the facts, he spoke with a confidence which many of us in this House do not feel and feel that we show we do not feel when we speak in this House. I hope that on many occasions later the hon. Member will take part in these debates, when I am quite sure he will not hesitate to enter heartily into the controversies which divide this House in a healthy way.
I do not want to detain the House too long, but there are certain points I want to make. One or two of them have not yet been touched on, although many of them are necessary reiterations of points which have been made, probably better, in other parts of the House. I am very much impressed and surprised at the equanimity with which the country has taken the fact that the Canal is not yet open and not even yet cleared. As my right hon. and learned Friend has said, we know it might have been cleared if we had gone at it full bat. If General Wheeler had taken all the available British aid he could have got, probably it would have been open by the end of January, and open to all classes of shipping early in February. We know now that it may well be Easter before ships begin to go through again.
One cannot help wondering how this has come about, whether General Wheeler was not quite so efficient as we hoped he was, whether he was under Nasser's thumb because he wanted to put himself under Nasser's thumb, or was directed that he had to obey Nasser on every point. Some time, I think, we ought to be told that, or our representative at the United Nations ought to inquire on that point, so that we can be quite clear and lay the blame where the blame is due, because I believe much blame is properly due in this regard.
Some four months ago Sir Anthony Eden, speaking with the authority of Prime Minister at the Dispatch Box, said very clearly to this House and to the world that' never would we accept the unfettered control of the Canal by any one nation. That included Egypt and, naturally, was directed at Egypt. I do hope that when my right hon. Friend winds up this evening he will give us a little more assurance than my right hon. and learned Friend gave us when he opened the debate. My right hon. and


learned Friend said that Britain's attitude towards the dues was yet to be determined. What exactly did he mean by that? I pray God he did not mean that we are going back from what Sir Anthony said and that we may be prepared to allow Egypt to have unfettered control of the Canal. If that were so it would indeed be a humiliation.
The right hon. Member for Ebbw Vale (Mr. Bevan) spoke, I thought wrongly, about our prestige in the world today. It is true that I have not personally been abroad since the happenings of last autumn, but friends of mine who have been abroad and returned—especially from the Middle East—do not at all hold the views of the right hon. Member. People may dislike us or disagree with us, but that our prestige has gone down because of that I do not believe to be true. I believe the bulk of the people throughout the world would rather respect a Britain which tried although she failed than a Britain which never tried at all.
I come back to the point, and want to emphasise it to my right hon. Friend, that in my opinion, for what it is worth—it may not be worth very much, but I believe I am expressing the opinion of many people throughout the country—if we are forced into the position of having to advise our shipping to pay all its dues to Egypt we shall have put ourselves in a more terrible spot than we were in before.
What is going to happen if we do not pay and Egypt refuses to allow certain ships through the Canal? The right hon. Member for Ebbw Vale came up to that fence with a great bluster, riding like mad, and suddenly stopped when my right hon. and learned Friend asked what he would do. He was asked a second and a third time and at last said "I would hand it over to the United Nations." He said that with an air of finality. Did he mean hand it over in the same way as the fate of Israeli shipping was handed to the United Nations four, five and six years ago? Did he mean really to hand over in the same way as Kashmir was handed to the United Nations, or as the question of Hungary was handed over? If that were the threat of the right hon. Member it was a very poor one, and he knows it was a very poor one.
All this bombast, all this fine stuff, this rhetoric—which I much admire and wish I had a fraction of it—was really eye-wash when it ended with the declaration that he would hand the issue back to the United Nations. [HON. MEMBERS: "What would you do?"] I have no authority. but what I would advise my right hon. Friends to do would be to declare a boycott of the Canal by British shipping and by the shipping of all our friends for as long as that happened. We are not doing too well now, but we might be doing worse. I would rather suffer as we are suffering now than suffer the grave dishonour of accepting unfettered control of the Canal by Egypt.
I should be prepared to do what America was prepared to do over Quemoy when it was threatened and, after consultation with our Dominions and our friends, to blockade the Canal altogether and shut out all shipping will-nilly from either end. I should be prepared to go as far as that. These things may come about, and I want to urge my right hon. Friends to realise the possibility of such happenings and forthwith to be taking steps—perhaps they are doing it already—to rally public opinion for action by Britain if Britain has to take action.
As the House knows—those who were good enough to hear what I said some months ago—my difference with the Government of the day some little while ago was not on the action they took but their failure to prepare themselves and the world for such action. I hope we shall be warned now, that the Prime Minister will mention that possibility to America and that we shall consult with the Commonwealth.

Mr. R. R. Stokes: Before leaving the question of the Canal, will the right hon. and gallant Gentleman say what he means by a blockade? Does he mean a physical blockade, or an economic boycott?

Captain Waterhouse: I mean, first of all, that I should certainly be prepared to have an economic boycott by us and by as many friends as I could urge to do so. I personally would be prepared to support Her Majesty's Government if they decided to have a physical blockade—put ships at either end to stop other ships going through.

Sir Robert Boothby: Jolly good. Hear, hear.

Captain Waterhouse: The Foreign Secretary said that he thought there was a decrease of danger in the Middle East. I was glad to hear him say that, because I have a tremendous respect for him and for his judgment, but I cannot feel that it is so. I think the threat of a blow-up with Israel has very definitely diminished. I do not think there is any material threat of trouble to Iraq, but I do think there is real threat of trouble while Syria is being fed by Russian arms in the north and Saudi Arabia, which is going to be equipped by American arms in the south, and, between those two, Jordan, which very unwisely has parted with its best friend, Great Britain.
The fact that we were running the Arab Legion was a quietening factor in the whole of that part of the world. Now that that has been dissipated, I am afraid that the danger has definitely increased. I do not think of Egypt as a menace in war, because I know that Egyptian soldiers will not fight and Egyptians officers cannot lead and Egypt is in a plight that does not enable her to go to war with anybody face-to-face. She can fight a back-stairs dagger war, and do it very well by long and horrid experience.
I take the position in Gaza today to be a terribly serious one. It seems to me a fearful thing that an encouragement or implied assurances should have been given to Israel and should have proved to be worthless. [HON. MEMBERS: "Oh."] Perhaps I should have said that it would be a tragedy if the assurances had proved to be worthless. We hope that they may not be so, but all the indications are that they will be. We have seen these things happen in this way before, and I am afraid that we shall see them happen in this sort of way again.
I have said that I am not fearful of an Egypt at war, because Egyptian soldiers will not fight and Egyptian officers cannot and will not lead them. I would not be fearful of the Egyptian position in the Middle East if we could handle it in a different way. It is we in this country—early Governments as well as recent Conservative Governments—who have boosted up Egypt. When

Lord Stansgate was first sent out to negotiate our withdrawal of troops from Cairo and ships from Alexandria, we at once gave a great strength to the Egyptian position and increased her prestige, and from that time to this, in a succession of events, we appear to have caved in to Egyptian wishes. With the Sudan, the Canal and one thing and another, we have given way.
I cannot think that the position of Egypt or of Nasser can be a very strong one. It seems to me peculiar to imagine that three or four kings can go to Alexandria or Cairo and sit down in perfect amity with a man who has destroyed one king by a palace revolution and has turned out his leader. Each king must know jolly well that Nasser would get rid of him too if he could possibly do so. I cannot think that each of these kings goes back to his palace and says, "Nasser is a fine man. I will trust him with all that I have got and follow him wherever he wants to go." They are more likely to think, "The sooner that we get rid of that man the better for our country."
If Colonel Nasser is allowed to continue uncurbed and Egypt is not brought to her senses, I fear this sequence is not finished. I think that within a measure-able and quite short time, in one way or another, Egypt will assail both Libya and the Sudan. It may be by subversive influences from inside. It may be by revolution and it may be by palace killing, but, somehow or other, Nasser, who cannot afford to stand still, will try to push out in one or eventually both these directions.
What then shall we do? Will we say again, "Hand it over to the United Nations"? Do hon. Members on any side of the House think that that is the line that we can take? Can we really say to Egypt, "All right, we welcome you, with your Russian friends and your subversive elements, on the borders of Kenya and Uganda"? If we did that, our whole position in Africa might be turned and disappear within a decade. That is the real danger that I foresee and the real dread that I have had ever since I took an active interest in this Egyptian vortex some five years ago. The real danger is that the Egyptians will get down to the Sudan and make our position in the whole of Africa untenable. That would be not merely a great misfortune


to us but a misfortune at least as great for all the coloured people who now inhabit those parts of the world.
I want to close on a rather different note. I want to refer, though not in detail, because the matter has been discussed at great length in another place quite recently, to the position of those who have had to leave Egypt. They are of various categories. Some have lived out the greater part of their lives there. Others have served Governments there and others have served Her Majesty's Government there. I know that Her Majesty's Government have done quite a lot for them. I am not saying that there is anything more that they should do just at this moment, but I am asking that every effort should be made to meet our obligations to these people to the full. We must do it handsomely and quickly.
In due course, claims and counterclaims will be made between this country and Egypt. They will amount probably to hundreds of millions of pounds, but do not let us think for one moment that we shall get anything out of Egypt in the way of cash. We have considerable assets of hers here. I hope that we shall conserve those assets and on no account let them be frittered away. But if we imagine that we can get anything out of Egypt we are fooling ourselves. I do not think that she has anything with which to part. In the last statistical returns of the United Nations, Egypt has a trade deficit of £40 million on a total export of £137 million. Making all allowances for her invisible exports due to the Canal and the rest, that is a stream which cannot readily be bridged. The chances of her being able to pay anything are negligible. We therefore have to shoulder, as usual, the whole burden ourselves.
The noble Lord, Lord Gosford, speaking in another place a fortnight ago, laid great stress on our position as world bankers and how important it was that we should not disturb our credit as bankers. Therefore, he rather implied, we had to be even more jealous of the accounts of Egyptians here than of the accounts and rights of British subjects in Egypt. I do not want Britain to become the banker for burglars. We must be the banker for honest traders. Our

first duty must be to our own citizens. However, I do not want to delay the House any longer on this subject, which perhaps is only marginally within the Vote.
The troubles that we have had in Egypt and through Egypt in the Middle East have been grave, but I am perfectly certain that we will minimise those troubles in the future if we put a bold face on our actions and meet our difficulties as they arise.

5.50 p.m.

Mr. Arthur Henderson: I should like to add my tribute to that paid by the right hon. and gallant Member for Leicester. South-East (Captain Waterhouse) following the maiden speech of my hon. Friend the Member for Wednesbury (Mr. Stone-house). I am particularly glad to do so because my hon. Friend and I are neighbours in the East Midlands.
The right hon. and gallant Member for Leicester, South-East put his finger right on the main difference between the Government side and the Opposition with regard to the way in which we should deal with these international problems. He rather rebuked my right hon. Friend the Member for Ebbw Vale (Mr. Bevan) for wanting to hand over, as he put it, to the United Nations the problem when it arrives at a particularly difficult stage. I do not think that criticism is quite effective, because I listened with great expectation in the hope that the right hon. and gallant Gentleman would himself tell us what he proposed to do and that it would be something much more difficult, dangerous and dramatic than might be done by the United Nations. All that he could say was that if he had the power he would advise his friends to establish an economic blockade. There is nothing particularly dramatic about that.

Captain Waterhouse: A physical blockade.

Mr. Henderson: A physical blockade is within the power of the United Nations to impose under Article 41 if it so desires. The main difference between the two sides of the House is that we wish to work within the Charter of the United Nations whereas the right hon. and gallant Gentleman and many of his hon.
Friends prefer, if necessary, to work outside the Charter and, if necessary, go it alone, or, as he said, go it with other friends who might agree with us.

Captain Waterhouse: May I make one correction of what the right hon. and learned Gentleman has said? We would not prefer to do that. We would much prefer to see it done by all the nations, but we believe that the other nations would not work with us and it would have to be done by one or two determined nations.

Mr. Henderson: The answer to the right hon. and gallant Gentleman is that the United Nations has already made it quite clear by vote in the General Assembly that it believes that the Suez Canal should be an international waterway. Only two months ago it passed another Resolution requesting the Canal to be cleared as soon as the cease-fire had taken effect and the troops of the other nations, France, Britain and Israel, had left Egyptian territory. So I do not think there is any reason to advance an hypothesis of that nature. Certainly, there is nothing that I know of which would justify it.
Nor is there any difference between hon. Members on the other side and those on this side of the House as to the way in which Colonel Nasser has behaved. I certainly cannot think of anything more contemptible on the part of anyone who seeks to work on the basis of good neighbourly relations with other countries than for Colonel Nasser, as he did last year, without any warning to the Governments concerned and with whom his Government was in friendly relations and with whom he had had negotiations only two years before, when he had put it on record that he recognised the importance of the Suez Canal as an international waterway from the point of view of the British Commonwealth, then, without any warning, at a mass demonstration at Alexandria, to announce that he was going to nationalise the Canal.
Certainly we have no reason to have any particular liking for Colonel Nasser. Where we differ from hon. Members opposite is that we do not believe that a sovereign Government exercising its rights in a most contemptible way perhaps, is debarred from carrying out the policy which Colonel Nasser sought to

do by his decree in nationalising the Canal.
What I would suggest for the consideration of the House is that we have to look at the source of these troubles. The Foreign Secretary suggested that we ought to deal with these matters from the point of view of the present and the future. It is quite impossible to do that without examining these problems in the light of past events. For example, the Foreign Secretary criticises the United Nations on the ground that it had fumbled in its handling of the Middle Eastern problems. The hon. Member for Windsor (Sir C. Mott-Radclyffe) tonight referred to the fact that the United Nations is weak and ineffective, the General Assembly is too large, that there was too large a representation of Afro-Asian nations who might have a veto, but he omitted to put on record what, in fact, the United Nations has accomplished during the last four months.
After all, we are told, the General Assembly can do nothing more than make recommendations, but we have to remember why this problem ever got to the General Assembly. It was because on 31st October the French and British Governments exercised their right of veto and frustrated any action by the Security Council. Thereupon, the Yugoslav delegate pressed that the matter should be taken to a special session of the General Assembly. If we are told all that the General Assembly can do is to pass recommendations, let us see what has happened. It passed a resolution first of all calling for a cease-fire. It passed a resolution calling upon the French, British and Israeli forces to evacuate Egyptian territory. It passed another resolution establishing the United Nations Emergency Force.
I shall come nearer, perhaps, to the point of view of hon. Members opposite in what I am about to say. Those resolutions had been complied with by those three Governments.

Captain Waterhouse: Of course.

Mr. Henderson: The right hon. and gallant Gentleman says "Of course". That does not alter the fact that those recommendations certainly had some value because they had been complied with by those three Governments. The Government of Egypt, on the other hand,


has failed to comply with resolutions which had been passed by the United Nations as far back as September, 1951. I would be the first to agree that it would be a gross travesty of justice if the United Nations were now to fail to compel the Government of Egypt to carry out resolutions that have been passed, as I say, in days gone by, and resolutions which may be passed in the next few days. I believe that this will be a vital test for the United Nations. I hope that I have made my point clear. I am trying to make the point that it will be the duty on the part of the United Nations to secure the carrying out of its resolutions in so far as they require action by Egypt.
Let me take the case of the Suez Canal and the claim of the Egyptian Government to exercise belligerent right against Israel. In September, 1951, the matter came before the Security Council following a ban on Israeli shipping. The Government of Egypt took the view that they were exercising their belligerent right and that therefore they were entitled to ban Israeli shipping. What was the view of the Security Council? In its resolution it said this:
The Security Council … Considering that since the armistice regime, which has been in existence for nearly two and a half years, is of a permanent character, neither party can reasonably assert that it is actively a belligerent …
That is a clear indication that so far as the Security Council is concerned—and this resolution was passed unanimously—Egypt had no right to exercise or seek to exercise belligerent rights in respect of the Suez Canal and to debar Israeli shipping from passing through the Canal.
The very next day, I believe it is on record, a spokesman of the Egyptian Government said, "Oh, the resolution of the Security Council is only a recommendation and we do not propose to take any notice of it". It has been suggested in some quarters that the resolution is no longer valid. I hope that is not so. If it is so, I hope that steps will be taken to pass another resolution compelling Egypt to face up to its responsibilities and to cease claiming that it has belligerent rights at the present time. The same thing applies to Egypt's action in the Gulf of Aqaba. It claims again belligerent

rights and, therefore, the right to ban Israeli shipping.

Mr. William Shepherd: I follow what the right hon. and learned Gentleman is saying, and I agree with him. Would he express the view whether, if this case went to an international court, that court would uphold or reject Israeli rights?

Mr. Henderson: Lawyers, like other persons, differ. I have in mind an excellent article which appeared in The Times last Friday written by a special correspondent who, I imagine, must be well versed in international law. The writer definitely takes the view that the operation of the 1947 Armistice Agreements prevents any of the five Arab countries who signed those Armistice Agreements, or Israel on the other side, from exercising belligerent rights. Incidentally, in spite of what the hon. Gentleman the Member for Windsor said earlier, those Agreements are binding on the Government of Egypt because that Government signed one of them alongside the Government of Israel. I do not want to take up the time of the House, but I would point out that this article is well worth studying, because it makes quite clear the fact that in the view of the writer Egypt does not enjoy belligerent rights as against Israel in view of the operation of those Agreements.
Then take the position in the Gaza strip. The Foreign Secretary has already indicated that this is not territory which formerly belonged to Egypt. It was part of the old Mandate of Palestine and merely fell within the military lines of the Egyptian Army on the day on which the Armistice was signed. I believe that the United Nations Emergency Force should stay in the Gaza strip, and I agree with the view of the Government on this point. Indeed, I would welcome administration of the Gaza strip by the United Nations itself. However, other views are apparently to prevail. Yet I think it would be a calamity if the United Nations Emergency Force were to be taken out of the Gaza strip before a final peace settlement is achieved. I believe that the dangerous situation which still exists, to some extent, would become infinitely more dangerous if the Emergency Force were taken away from that area.
The Government of Egypt cannot escape responsibility for all the raids made by the Fedayeen which have taken place during the past four years. Again it is a well-accepted axiom of international law that a Government is responsible for any forays of force, armed or otherwise, that take place from its territory into the territory of another country.

Mr. William Yates: Is Israel working with the Mixed Armistice Commission, or not, on the matter of border raids?

Mr. Henderson: She has been in the past. I cannot say what has happened since the incidents of the last three months, but there were many meetings of the Mixed Armistice Commission prior to last year. However, that is irrelevant to my point, which is that the Egyptian Government cannot escape responsibility for the Fedayeen raids, and I believe that it would be asking too much, and it would be a gross betrayal of Israel, if it were to be made liable again to these raids from the Gaza strip.

Mr. Barnet Janner: Would my right hon. and learned Friend not go a step further in order to satisfy the hon. Member for The Wrekin (Mr. W. Yates), by pointing out to him that the Fedayeen have been trained by the Egyptians to commit murder on the other side?

Mr. Henderson: I thought that was more or less an established fact. Whatever responsibility may have been allocated in the past, and I want to be fair, the Security Council has attributed blame on some occasions to the Government of Israel in respect of reprisal raids, just as it has to the Government of Egypt and, possibly, to the Government of Jordan. That does not alter the fact that anyone who looks at the map can see the finger known as the Gaza strip going up the coast at the back of Israel. If, therefore, there is a desire on the part of the Government occupying that strip to make things difficult for its neighbour, the fact that it occupies that strip of territory makes it very much easier.
Again I find myself in partial agreement with hon. Gentlemen opposite in saying that I believe the United Nations, having brought pressure to bear

on the Governments of France, Britain and Israel, must now ensure that its Resolutions applying to Egypt are carried out.

Mr. Fell: I am sorry to interrupt the right hon. and learned Gentleman, but he has said repeatedly that the United Nations must compel Egypt. How is the United Nations to compel Egypt? Supposing it came to a vote in the United Nations on something like he has been talking about and a sufficiently large section of the Assembly defeated the vote, what would he suggest should be done then?

Mr. Henderson: The hon. Gentleman has raised a hypothesis——

Mr. Fell: Well, what do you think——

Mr. Henderson: We cannot both speak at the same time. We cannot advance a hypothesis as to what we should do or should not do in certain circumstances. [An HON. MEMBER: "Pass another resolution? I can take a test case. I will take the case of the Suez Canal or of the Gulf of Aqaba. I agree strongly with my right hon. Friend the Member for Ebbw Vale that we should not send a warship. I would send a ship manned by Israeli volunteers to Aqaba and also in due course to the Suez Canal when that is completely cleared. If the Egyptians used force to hinder the Israeli ship on its lawful occasions, as justified by the rule of international law and in accordance with a decision of the Security Council, then I believe that the United Nations should either call upon——

Captain Waterhouse: What would this particular ship do?

Mr. Kenneth Piekthorn: The volunteers of Ebbw Vale—what would they say?

Mr. Henderson: We would be testing whether the Government of Egypt intended to interfere with it. [An HON. MEMBER: "Supposing it did?"] Once it is established that it is going to interfere, I would report that to the Security Council, and then the Security Council could take action.

Mr. Fell: Supposing it is vetoed?

Mr. Henderson: Then we could go to the General Assembly.

Mr. Fell: And supposing it does not get through there?

Mr. Henderson: Then we would be getting to the point where the United Nations was hopelessly——

Mr. Fell: Nonsense.

Mr. Henderson: But I say that the United Nations would face up to that responsibility. There is no justification for saying that it will fail in its responsibilities. After all, it showed itself pretty firm in dealing with the actions of the British and the French——

Mr. Fell: America, the right hon. and learned Gentleman means, not the United Nations.

Mr. Henderson: Oh, no.

Mr. Fell: Monstrous.

Mr. Henderson: It is no argument to say "monstrous". Let me refer to the vote. The hon. Gentleman said that it was the United States, but the vote was 60 to 4. I am afraid that suggestion will not do. I am not afraid to accept the challenge of the hon. Gentleman and his hon. Friends as to whether the United Nations will allow Egypt or any other country to bring the entire affairs of the world into a state of chaos.
I realise the position with regard to Hungary. We must face it. The United Nations has not the authority or power to deal with possibly the most heavy armed country in the world, and a founder-member of the United Nations, which takes it upon itself to defy and ignore resolutions passed by the United Nations. I am not prepared to accept the view that we are heading for disaster because we want to work within the Charter of the United Nations upon the problems of the Middle East.
I will sum up what I have said. I have referred to the immediate problems. As was said by the Foreign Secretary and my right hon. Friend the Member for Ebbw Vale, we shall not solve them unless we face up to the causes of all the trouble in the Middle East. There are the questions of boundaries and refugees. The right hon. and gallant Member for Leicester, South-East referred to the expulsion of British subjects. I have the greatest sympathy for them in view of the way they have been treated by the Egyptian Government. I should also like to put in a word for the 20,000 Jews who have been persecuted and expelled from

Egypt. I am informed that another 20,000 are liable to be expelled in the near future. That is action on the part of the Egyptian Government which is contrary not only to the Charter of the United Charter but to the Convention on Human Rights which they have previously accepted. I am not under estimating, in making that reference, the terrible tragedy of the 900,000 refugees.
After visiting Israel last year returned with a very fixed view about the Israeli Government. Time and time again they have asked for a peace conference. They are ready to discuss the reshaping of the boundaries, without mutilation, and by agreement, to get rid of some of the anomalies. I believe the Israeli Government would be prepared to make a very substantial contribution towards the financial settlement of the 900,000 refugees.
I believe that a great deal can be done by means of co-operation in schemes for using the waters of the Jordan and in securing the development of the Middle East through the agency of the United Nations. Whatever suspicions we may have about the Soviet Union, if we are to seek a solution through the agency of the United Nations we cannot exclude Russia from playing her part in the great work of reconstruction which is so essential if we are to get rid of the festering sore of war in the Middle East.

6.14 p.m.

Mr. Godfrey Nicholson: I agree with the right hon. and learned Member for Rowley Regis and Tipton (Mr. A. Henderson) that this will make or break the United Nations. He did not use those words, but I put my interpretation on what he said. We shall all hope and pray that it will make the United Nations rather than break it.
If the United Nations fails to carry out the task with which it is faced in the Middle East, I see nothing but chaos and turmoil ensuing. I am not one of those who rail at the United Nations for being only partially effective. It is partly our responsibility to make it effective. I should like Her Majesty's Government to be even firmer in their expressions of determination to make the United Nations take the jump in front of it. If it does not take the jump, all will be over for peace in the Middle East. Something will have to take its place if it fails, some


union or body representing the democracies which are willing to boar their share of world responsibility.
But I did not rise to talk merely about the United Nations. I rose chiefly to say how perturbed I was at something said by the Foreign Secretary. I am very much surprised that subsequent speakers have not taken up the point. My right hon. and learned Friend laid down certain conditions for a settlement between Jews and Arabs. He said that there must be guarantees to the Arab States against Israeli aggression, and guarantees to Israel that she shall not be exterminated, and compromises on the question of refugees, water, and peace on the frontiers. I am entirely in agreement with those condition's, but my right hon. and learned Friend spoke about "an agreed settlement" and, almost under his breath, said that he was not in favour of "an imposed settlement".
I am perturbed, indeed appalled, by that approach. It seemed to me to reek of unreality. It was the same sort of thing that might have been said by any Foreign Secretary over the last eight years. We have all seen the result of waiting for an agreed settlement between Jew and Arab since the setting up of Israel. It must be an imposed settlement. If anybody thinks that we shall get Jew and Arab to sit round the same conference table, he is very much mistaken and had better think again. Anyone who has travelled in those parts of the world would, I am sure, agree with that view. The settlement must be imposed.

Mr. Janner: Does not the hon. Gentleman think it is worth while trying to arrange such a round table conference? Does he not think that the Foreign Secretary's statement the other day about the Guildhall speech might be interpreted as something which would prevent such an arrangement?

Mr. Nicholson: If a round table conference could be arranged, of course, it would be worth trying. However, the hon. Gentleman knows quite well that no Arab leader would dare, of his own volition, to go to a conference with the Israelis. Consequently, I say that this must be forced upon them by an imposed settlement. If we are to face the facts, we must recognise that under present circumstances we shall never get the two

sides even in adjoining conference rooms, much less in the same conference room.
The hon. Member also asked for my comments on the reference to the Guildhall speech. I agree that we shall never get the Israelis to yield substantial portions of territory. They will fight to the death, to extermination, rather than yield much territory. A few hundred square yards here may, of course, be exchanged for a few hundred square yards there in order to remove some minor frontier injustice, but we shall never get Israel—I am not taking sides in this—to make substantial concessions of territory. When the word "compromise" is used, we must give up the idea that it concerns large cessions of territory.
It concerns only, I believe, the question of refugees. The whole thing turns on the question of the refugees. In spite of all our sympathy with Israel in the light of the great achievements which have been carried out by the Jews, we must recognise the fact that grave wrong has been done by the Jews to the Arabs. I do not wish to open up that old and barren controversy, but 900,000 Arabs have been driven out of Palestine. It is useless for apologists to say that they went of their own accord. They want to go back, but cannot. As I said last July, Israel is littered with the ruins of Arab villages, and it is not a pleasant sight.
I have no difficulty in taking up an attitude of complete impartiality. Had I been a Jew, I should have acted just as the Jews did. Equally, had I been an Arab, I should have acted just as the Arabs did. The balance of right and wrong is very even. It is one of the ironies of history that so often one cannot attribute praise or blame. There is something inevitable about historical processes that drive perfectly good people into untenable positions. But the whole thing turns on the solution of the refugee problem. Israel and the friends of Israel all over the world must recognise that this grave wrong must be righted; and the Arabs must recognise that the unfortunate refugees cannot be kept as a political pawn in the game. They must make some effort at a settlement of them. As I have said before in this House, the only way out, as I see it, is by a settlement imposed by the United Nations, and


a large United Nations loan to Israel of £200 million or £300 million to be used to settle the Arab refugees in the Arab lands.
If one says that may be ideal but that we can achieve such a solution by a solution by an agreed settlement between Jew and Arab, I say it is nonsense. Such a tremendous budget of concessions on both sides will never be achieved by agreement. It must be achieved by an imposed settlement, and such a settlement can be imposed only by the United Nations. That is why I was so deeply perturbed and grieved to hear my right hon. and learned Friend say that he was against an imposed settlement. If that is the best this country can do in the way of a policy, we must think again. We must face the fact that we shall never get an agreed settlement between the two.

Viscount Hinchingbrooke: The point of view of my hon. Friend is extremely interesting. Does he envisage a repetition of the tripartite guarantee, the imposition of a settlement guaranteed by a group of Powers thereafter? Is there to be a settlement on existing or approximately existing boundaries, or is the settlement to be after a major reconstruction? Surely my hon. Friend must take into account the kinetics of the Middle Eastern situation? It is no use imposing a settlement as if it were a static society now.

Mr. Nicholson: All frontiers are static, or meant to be. My noble Friend asks if I envisage a return to the tripartite settlement. Certainly I do not envisage that. I do not see any group of a few Powers that would carry out the requisite procedure to impose that sort of settlement. That is why I agree with the right hon. and learned Member for Rowley Regis and Tipton that this will make or break the United Nations; and if it breaks the United Nations nothing but disaster can ensue in the Middle East and to the world as a whole. That is why it is so vital that we should try to force the United Nations into committing itself far more deeply in the Middle East than it is now. The present committal is a token committal, and it must be a wholehearted committal, right up to the hilt. As I say, I cannot envisage, in the name of reality, major concessions of territory by Israel. I think that should be a sufficient answer to my noble Friend.

Mr. Philip Bell: We have had experience of this, surely. We tried to hold a mandate in Palestine and we could not do it. Does my hon. Friend think we should go into that all over again?

Mr. Nicholson: I am not suggesting that we should hold a mandate all over again. Heaven forfend. I am not suggesting that we should hold a mandate. I suggest this is a task which can be carried out only by the United Nations, and if the United Nations fail, then heaven help us. I do not think I am called on to hazard a conjecture about what would then be the right course to take.
There is one other thing I wish to say, and I should not have taken so long had I not been interrupted. We have all had experience of the emotional sympathy for Israel over the events of the last two months——

Mr. Janner: It is more than sympathy.

Mr. Nicholson: —but let us beware of danger of becoming anti-Arab. Let us recognise the fact that Arab nationalism is a most powerful force and that it would be a fatal mistake for this country to fall into the same trap as that into which France has fallen. France is at war with the whole Arab world, and unless we take care, because we are quarrelling with Colonel Nasser we shall find ourselves quarrelling with the whole Arab world, or most of it. Let us remember that Arab nationalism, pan-Arabism, is a wholly admirable movement——

Mr. Janner: How can the hon. Member say that?

Mr. Nicholson: —and we should be among the strongest of its supporters. I have the deepest sympathy—I do not say this in any patronising manner—with hitherto second-class nations that want to become first-class nations.

Sir R. Boothby: That has been the cause of every war for the last century.

Mr. Nicholson: It may have been, but we cannot expect such nations as Indo-China, or the Arabs, or any one else, not to be infected by the germ of nationalism that works so powerfully. We had a narrow escape from losing a lot


of the Commonwealth through not recognising the existence and force of nationalism. At the last moment we avoided making that mistake. We have provided a magnificent example of how to treat a young nation by what has happened over Ghana, and I am proud of our record. Just because the Arab States are not part of the British Commonwealth, do not let us fall into that mistake about them.

Mr. Philip Bell: We should impose a settlement.

Mr. Nicholson: I did not say that we should impose a settlement, I said that the United Nations should. I apologise for detaining the House for so long, but I feel deeply about these things and I should be grateful if hon. Members would consider my words.

6.26 p.m.

Mr. R. R. Stokes: I do not wish to take up all the points made by the hon. Member for Farnham (Mr. Nicholson) because I shall cover them in my speech. But I found myself in disagreement with him over one thing and in almost complete agreement over another. He said that had he been an Arab, or an Israeli, he would have behaved exactly as did the Arabs or the Israelis. I am bound to say that had I been either Arab or Israeli, I should not have behaved like either of them, if hon. Members can accept a simplification of that kind.
When the hon. Gentleman talks about an imposed settlement, I am in a measure of agreement, but I think it a most difficult thing. I doubt whether it is wise at this moment to say that there may have to be an imposed settlement. Some of us know enough about these parts of the world to know that there is often complete disagreement among these nations on the same point, and to get them to agree on a large number of points might prove very difficult. I believe that I have the solution, and I propose to tell the House about it.
I wish that the right hon. and gallant Member for Leicester, South-East (Captain Waterhouse) was present in the Chamber now because I should like to say something to him as well. I think that the right hon. and gallant Gentleman should go back to school. I do not wish to be offensive, but I think it disastrous that a person of his standing should

for a single moment contemplate carrying out the violence which he contemplated over the Canal. It seems absolutely fantastic in 1957—[HON. MEMBERS: "What violence?"]. If he is proposing to use a warship for the purpose what is that but violence?

Sir R. Boothby: My right hon. and gallant Friend referred to a boycott.

Mr. Stokes: I asked him whether he meant a boycott or a blockade and he said "Both."
We must remember that Canal nationalisation did not happen out of the blue. There are certain events which preceded the nationalising of the Canal and in saying that I am not condoning the action of Colonel Nasser who has done a great deal of damage to the backward peoples of the world for reasons which I do not propose to go into now. But has the House forgotten the action over the Aswan Dam? There was a monument which I thought absolutely unsound. There was this monumental thing which was to be a pyramid for all time for the National Council of the Revolution agreed to by the Americans with a loan of £150 million and backed by us to the tune of about 10 per cent. of that amount. Colonel Nasser then told the people that there would be enough water for hydro-electric power in consequence; all the water they needed for twice the present population, and enough of the artificial poison made by Imperial Chemical Industries to poison their food for all time! And then, twelve days later what happened? The Americans withdrew their offer of £150 million. I understand their point of view, but the silliest thing ever done —and I hope that the Joint Under-Secretary will tell his right hon. and learned Friend this—was done by the Foreign Secretary. If he had not withdrawn our £15 million there would not have been this row at all. The only reason why he did it was that he had promised the Americans he would. I cannot imagine a Foreign Secretary acting with more irresponsibility. Instead of following suit twenty-four hours later, as he did, he could at least have taken six months arguing about it, and the situation then might have been quite different.
As I suppose most hon. Members know, I have just been for one of my


many trips as far east as Teheran—not to see Dr. Mossadegh—and back as far west as Rabat. I was received in a very friendly fashion and was astonished that nobody spat at me. I wish that the right hon. and gallant Member for Leicester, South-East were here——

Hon. Members: He is.

Mr. Ede: He has just turned up.

Mr. Stokes: The reason for my friendly reception was not my popularity. The friendly feelings for us which undoubtedly exist in the minds of most people in the Arab States can be put down to the fact that they all realise that there was no unanimity in this country over the Government's action in regard to Suez. The right hon. and gallant Member had better face that fact. Every Arab thinks there was collusion, but I have come to the conclusion that there was no collusion between us and Israel, not because of anything which was said by Government representatives, but for different reasons altogether.
I want the Joint Under-Secretary to tell the Foreign Secretary that it is about time he changed the whole Foreign Office system in regard to the rota for moving people round. It is just too silly. We have some very fine people in our Embassies in the Middle East. I am not criticising individuals, but there is a rule in the Foreign Office that nobody must stay anywhere for more than two years, and all because it seems to be regarded as inclement for people to stay behind the Iron Curtain for two years. So, because it is Buggins' turn to shift from Russia, the whole organisation does a general post. It is no use people from Bogota sitting down in Damascus. They have not the faintest idea of what is going on. As a commercial traveller, I should like to go to many different parts of the world. I want to go to them, but I know that I should not be of any use if I did. I am only of use in places where I am known. I am not ragging about this matter; it is quite serious. I got into trouble before, because everybody laughed when I made a speech. I want to impress upon the Foreign Secretary the importance of this matter. There used to be what was called a Levant circle—people who occupied places in the Middle East and who shifted round in a small orbit.
It is no use having good ambassadors if we do not consult them. The whole House knows that not one single head of mission in the Middle East was even told about the Suez affair before it took place. The Ambassador in Cairo heard it for the first time on the wireless. We in this House have been afflicted with speeches made from the Dispatch Box by the present Chancellor of the Exchequer and Foreign Secretary telling us of the tremendous plot unearthed as a result of our action and about the enormous quantity of arms discovered. I got into trouble last time because I called one of them a name which we are not allowed to use, and I had to apologise. Actually, I was absolutely right. Let us face it. I did not find anybody in the Middle East who had the remotest idea that there was likely to be a general conflagration, and I travelled among responsible people. Where did Her Majesty's Government get it all from? They never consulted anybody in the Middle East; nobody on the spot, who should have known, could have given it to them. It was a complete figment of their own imagination, thought up in order to excuse them doing what they wanted to do. That is the only conclusion anyone can come to.
All I can say about what was supposed to be the great Russian infiltration into Syria is that when I asked about it I was told, "Probably there are 140 Russians there altogether." From what we were told, it sounded as though the whole army was being run by Russian personnel. Admittedly Colonel Seraj is a Communist and we know that there are large quantities of arms sent in from Russia. But they are mostly out of date. Russia has 16,500 Mig 15's which she must get rid of somehow, and it is not surprising that she should have put some in the desert.
If we tot up all the arms that we discovered—I do not mean small arms and ammunition, but aeroplanes, tanks and all the rest—there was nothing we did not know about. In those days I had something to do with defence, which I no longer have, and I think that we were only five aeroplanes and 25 tanks out in our estimate of the total number that Russia had delivered. I agree that we had not spotted the one million blankets. On 8th November last, the Chancellor


of the Exchequer said that our action at Suez had disclosed everybody had been armed to the teeth by Russia.
As for the Suez Canal, I agree almost entirely with what my right hon. Friend said earlier. I have always taken the view that once we took our troops off the Canal bank it was no longer of any strategic use to us. From that moment we ought to have gone in for larger and faster tankers. With great respect to the right hon. and gallant Member for Leicester, South-East, I believe that that is the way to deal with Colonel Nasser. If we build larger and faster tankers which are too big to go through the Canal Nasser will have to make it wider and deeper, or the tankers will go round the Cape. The Suez Canal is not so important as we thought. Although all the row was apparently about the Canal, the Minister of Transport has come to that conclusion. According to the Financial Times, he said yesterday:
The use of the Suez Canal is far less vital to Britain than many people thought a few months ago. We are certainly not in the position of having to use the Canal at the earliest possible moment, or on the most unfavourable terms.
I entirely agree. The Financial Times shows conclusively that provided we use 65,000-ton tankers, of which there are a considerable number either built or building, we do not need to use the Canal.
I now come to the question of capital being required in order to keep the Canal open, which was the Foreign Secretary's point of view. I do not know from where he gets his information. Why should there be any question of foreign capital? What foreign capital, in fact, has been put into the Canal? I know of none, except when it was first started. In a few years' time it is expected that no less than 100 million tons of oil will go through the Canal each year. The Canal dues amount to 6s. 3d. a ton, which will provide a total of roughly £30 million a year, all of which can be used to widen and deepen the Canal. Let us remember that in 1955, the best year for dues, Egypt received only £700,000 from the Canal. That is the most the Egyptian Government ever got. Economically, in fact, the Canal did not matter very much to Egypt, except that it brought in a certain amount of services. Its dues did not amount to anything great to her.
In my view, it is no use our black-guarding Nasser. We do the same thing over and over again. We did it during

the war. We blackguarded all the other leaders, and we ourselves made Hitler and Mussolini heroes. Every time we blackguard the leader of another country we make him more popular in that country. The only people who can get rid of Nasser are the Egyptians. If we want to take a hand in it, the way to do so is to apply economic sanctions, by making ourselves independent of the Canal. Then the whole thing will right itself.
We are not the only people who suffer. All the Arab nations do. And what is going to happen to Pakistan, India and all the rest, for Asiatic nations are very much concerned? They all need to export, and they will now have to send their exports round the Cape, and they all have to import large quantities of goods in order to improve their conditions of life. There should be a combination of economic pressure upon Nasser and pressure from his friends to keep the Suez Canal open. That would probably be the most likely way to arrive at a satisfactory conclusion.
I disagreed with all the interruptions that went on at an earlier stage of the debate about the United Nations. It is much better to talk about things than to have a war about them. After all, the United Nations is the best thing we have had so far, and to bawl it down is stupid and irresponsible. It may be true that it is not yet very effective, but it is up to the members of the United Nations to make it effective. I do not think that it has done so very badly up to now.
What is the solution of the Arab-Israel question? The Arab is naturally mistrustful about the promises made to him. In 1916 we wanted the Arabs to come into the war and help us to kick the Turks out of Palestine. We promised them that that land would be restored to them. In 1917, when we were short of cash, Lord Balfour wrote what is now known as the "Balfour Declaration" to Lord Rothschild, and more or less promised part of the same land to the Jews. But it was stated in the Declaration that the civil and religious rights of the indigenous population would be preserved. In those days the persecutions of Hitler had not taken place.
We come to the mandate for Palestine which we had after the 1914–18 war, and then to the Resolution of the United Nations in 1947. People now forget the most disreputable things that were done


over that Resolution. On 26th November, 1947, when the vote ought to have been taken at the United Nations, it was found that those who wanted the partition of Palestine were going to be three short of the necessary quota to give them their two-thirds majority, so Palestine would then not be made a State. What happened? The vote was put off!
President Truman then suborned the representatives of Haiti, the Philippines and Liberia. He said, "There is no more cash for you unless you vote for this Resolution." Whereas on the 26th November 30 would have voted "for" and 19 "against", on 29th November those three States went the other way, and 33 voted for and 13 against. That is no way to make the Arabs like the United Nations. When the 33 voted for and the 13 against, one observer said:
Gasps of satisfaction greeted the affirmative vote of Haiti, Liberia and the Philippines".
That is what makes the Arabs distrustful of promises that are made to them.

Captain Waterhouse: Was not the right hon. Gentleman just commending U.N.O. as the best thing we had had?

Mr. Stokes: Yes. It is the best so far. The right hon. and gallant Member for Leicester, South-East wants to go right back to the dark ages. That would be very disagreeable. The United Nations may not yet be very effective, but for Heaven's sake let us not chuck it now. That would be a perfectly assinine thing to do. I say that without any disrespect to the right hon. and gallant Member.

Mr. S. Silverman: My right hon. Friend has said that we ought to accept a United Nations decision because that is the best thing we have got. Does he now justify the Arabs in not accepting it, for the reasons that he gave?

Mr. Stokes: I am not trying to justify the Arabs. I am what is called a "pro-Arab." I am not anti-Jew. I am certainly anti-Zionist, but that is quite a different thing. I do not agree with the Zionists. All my friends in Arabia are anti-Zionist. When I first went to Baghdad there were 80,000 Jews living there peacefully with Arabs. The Zionists have made the Arab hate the Jew. There is now a great opportunity for a general settlement.
Several points have to be settled about the recent war, or whatever we call it, and I want to enumerate them briefly and say what I think should be done. At the time I started thinking about making this speech the Israelis were still on the Gulf of Aqaba and in the Gaza strip. Mr. Ben Gurion, rightly and courageously, has taken his troops out. It is now up to us and the other nations of the world to say, "After the series of rows we shall put United Nations troops here in sufficient numbers to control the frontiers and ensure peace while outstanding points are settled."
These points are four. The first concerns the refugees or expellees. Every Arab, especially in a responsible position, talks about the 900,000 refugees. That is a running sore which will have to be healed. The United Nations passed a Resolution years ago that any of these refugees who wanted to go back to Israel should be allowed to do so, but from what I am told the proportion would not be more than 5 per cent. That might help to get a resettlement elsewhere of the remaining 850,000. They will have to settle elsewhere, and not stay in miserable camps where their conditions are deplorable.
The second point is compensation, on which the United Nations has also passed a Resolution on compensation for loss of property. The Arabs do not care twopence who pays. It is not a question of shall Israel pay? A subscription fund may have to be opened up to settle this matter. It might be a very satisfactory way of dealing with it. The third point is frontier adjustment, which has been called "rectification" and "compromise" here this afternoon. There are ridiculous anomalies and perfectly silly situations, such as where a house is in one country and its land in another. They must be put right. The fourth point is about Jerusalem becoming an international city.
It is often said that peace is possible. The first thing that must be done is to make it abundantly clear to the Arabs that there will be no more Israeli expansion into Arab land. Rightly or wrongly, the Arabs fear Zionist expansion, and we cannot blame them. They have seen it happening and they are always afraid that more and more Jews will pour in from all parts of the world. In July, 1950, the Knesset decided that every Jew


had a right to settle in Palestine known as "The law of Return". What the Arabs want to hear now is not only the Eisenhower doctrine, which they recognise is useful—though more useful to Europeans and to Arabs—but that there will be no further Israeli territorial advance. They will not accept anything but that.
I have talked to all my Arab friends, and I have even made speeches about this subject in public. I have told them, "You have to accept Israel." Even the most responsible of them still talk about throwing the Jews into the sea, and when I say to them, "You cannot do that," they reply, "Yes, we know, but we cannot say that." We should say to them that, first of all, they are totally incapable of throwing the Jews into the sea, to use the vernacular; secondly, that if they were capable of doing it, all the European nations and others would stop them, and so, therefore, the best thing for them to do is to accept the situation on the basis of assurances that there will be no further expansion into Arab lands on the part of the Jews. If that was done, we might begin to work towards a solution which might perhaps bring about a state of peace in these parts.

Mr. G. Nicholson: I thought the right hon. Gentleman jeered at me, or at any rate disagreed with me, on the suggestion that the solution should be an imposed settlement, which is not very much different from the line which the right hon. Gentleman is now laying down. Does he suggest that it would be an agreed settlement through the United Nations or that there should be some imposed settlement?

Mr. Stokes: I am sorry if the hon. Member for Farnham (Mr. Nicholson) did not listen to what I said. I was very interested in what he said, and with which I largely agree, but I felt it was unwise to say it at this moment. [Interruption.] I cannot help it; I have no control over what the hon. Gentleman says. He has said it already, and, of course, I know and appreciate it, but I do not think that it is a very good way to start negotiations to say that we are going to impose the solution. I do not think that a solution will be found that way, and I cannot see that a solution produced by that means will bring peace to this area.
I should suggest the method of the round table conference or a talk round

the table, making it clear that the Arabs will accept the Israelis and that the Israelis will not expand into Arab territory. On that basis, I think it will be quite possible to start to work for a solution. Whether we shall get a decision or not, I do not know, but I am quite sure that we should begin to pay a little more attention to the fourth arm— the blare of the wireless.
Those of us who have been to these territories realise that, unfortunately, about 95 per cent, of the population do not read, but they all listen. And they do not drink. [Interruption.] I know, everybody has different views about that. They sit in the coffee shops and listen to the "Voice of Cairo" and voices from elsewhere blaring at them all day long, and we answer three days later by putting up someone with a Suffolk voice to do it. I have a great affection for Suffolk, but it is just no use trying to sell our policy to the Arabs by means of a chap with a Suffolk voice talking Arabic.
What we really ought to do is to take more trouble to find competent people with the right voices, the right method, the right language and right kind of expression on the spot, wherever the spot may be. I do not know how these things are arranged, but I am quite certain that we ought to do these things at once, not the day after tomorrow or next week, but that we should be answering more quickly the lies put about by the "Voice of Cairo." I do not need to enumerate the untruths that are told by Cairo Radio. Everybody knows the sort of stuff now put out by it in Cairo and elsewhere, but everybody listens to it and it does an enormous amount of harm.
Finally, I want to say a few words on an entirely different matter. I did not go to Egypt this time. I am sorry that I did not go, but it was for reasons I need not go into now. I have had a very considerable number of reports as to the condition of things there at present, and I say that the plight of the women and children there is becoming quite terrible.
There are simply no medical stores, and medical arrangements have broken down. You cannot get medical stores in Cairo unless you belong to the armed forces, and I should have thought that it would be a very wise move on our part to send a ship with, perhaps, £2 million worth of medical stores to


Alexandria. Whether the offer would be accepted or not, I do not know, but at least the gesture would be there, because the situation which we find there is no more the fault of these people than it is of our own people.

Sir R. Boothby: Surely, the right hon. Gentleman realises that the plight of the Jews in Egypt is now frightful, and that the Egyptians are doing things to the Jews in Egypt today which are only comparable to the things which the Nazis did to the Jews in Germany during the war?

Mr. Stokes: Of course, I do not know that, but it is quite certain that if Egyptian women cannot get medical stores, the Jews in Egypt will not be getting them either. I am not suggesting that if we send medical stores there, they should not be given to the Jews. It is not my responsibility, but I do not see that because the Jews will not receive them is a reason why we should not send them at all.

Mr. Janner: Does not the right hon. Gentleman agree that the kind of thing he is now saying is likely to incite the Arab world if heard on the radio? Secondly, why does he not inform himself about what is happening in a country like Egypt? The right hon. Gentleman asks questions, but does he not realise that between 18,000 and 20,000 people have been driven out of Egypt and that everything has been taken from them, in exactly the same way as occurred under the Nazis in Germany?

Mr. Stokes: This is just what happens when you start making war, and I did not start this conflagration. I say that nothing is going to incite the Arabs, or the responsible people among the Arabs, who will be fairly successful in understanding what I am saying. I am sorry if I have not made myself clear to the hon. Member for Leicester, North-West (Mr. Janner) but the Arabs will understand what I am trying to say.
If these four points which I have been talking about could be taken up, in view of Mr. Ben-Gurion having done what he has done, very courageously and gallantly, although in the face of great opposition from his own people, and could be settled, and undertakings given on the part of the Arabs to accept Israel and on the part of Israel not to expand

into Arab territory, then I believe that we should have a far better chance of bringing about a reasonable peace in the Middle East.

6.58 p.m.

Mr. Frederick Gough: Some of my friends in the Home Guard during the last war told me that they had a weapon which was capable of firing large salvoes in all directions, and it was called the Stokes gun. I think we are all very grateful to the right hon. Member for Ipswich (Mr. Stokes) for a forceful speech, and I myself am extremely grateful for the thumbnail sketch of himself which the right hon. Gentleman provided when he said that if he were an Israeli he would not behave like one, and that if he were an Arab he would not behave like one either. I do not know whether this is the right hon. Gentleman's definition of Socialism.
I should like to adopt a rather more serious note. I myself was rather impressed with the leading article in The Times today, which described the situation in the Middle East as being somewhat fluid. For myself, I think that that situation is perhaps better described by the story of the man who went to a cinema, who went to sleep and found when he woke up that the picture was at the same stage as when he came in.
Before pursuing that particular line of thought, there are two things in the speech of the right hon. Member for Ipswich to which I should like to refer, because they are of very great importance at the present moment. The right hon. Gentleman first of all referred to the Foreign Office personnel in the Middle East, and I should like to underline and endorse everything he said. From my own personal experience gained in travelling in that part of the world, I can say that there seem to be far too many unnecessary changes. I should like to add that there also seem to be far too few of our representatives in the Middle East who are really proficient in the Arabic language.
I should also like to say something on one of the many solutions which the right hon. Gentleman proposed for this problem in connection with larger tankers. I have put down one or two Questions on this subject, and I have received long letters from the Chancellor of the


Exchequer. I think the difficulty there really is that we are all looking for a solution in the fairly near future. If we are realistic about this we shall agree that we shall not be able to build these very large tankers for many years. If the right hon. Gentleman really considers this matter of a large number of tankers of 65,000 tons plus, he will find that that is a slight exaggeration.

Mr. Stokes: May I call the attention of the hon. Gentleman to the Financial Times of 12th March containing a beautiful diagram showing the number of tankers built, the number building, the number which would go through the Suez Canal and so on, and the leading article said that there is no shortage of oil in Europe.

Mr. Gough: I take the right hon. Gentleman's point. However, I do not want to enlarge on this subject.
A great deal has been said about the United Nations. The right hon. and learned Member for Rowley Regis and Tipton (Mr. A. Henderson), who is not present at the moment, placed far too much reliance upon what the United Nations might do. He seemed to place a great deal of reliance on the fact that the United Nations has gravely passed resolutions and has said on many occasions to Egypt that Egypt should not do this, that and the other. It seems to me, however—and I agree with my hon. Friend the Member for Farnham (Mr. Nicholson)—that we are now in a position in the Middle East where the United Nations, as he put it, will be either made or broken. At the moment the two countries which perhaps could do more than any other country in helping the United Nations to find a settlement are cold-shouldered, and not included in the United Nations Force in the Middle East. I refer to our country and to France.
In that connection I would say a word, which I hope will come to his notice through the OFFICIAL REPORT, to the new American Ambassador. I am sure the whole House will join with me in wishing him the very best of good fortune in his new and most responsible task. It lies very largely not with the American people but with the State Department that the British and the French at the moment are not in the picture so far as the United Nations is concerned in the

Middle East. I believe that the American Ambassador has been and may still be a very good polo player. I have only played polo a few times in my youth. In that game there is one facet which is called "riding off." I would remind him that there is nothing more infuriating for a small person who is rather a good polo player than to find himself being "ridden off" by a large person for the whole of the game. I suggest with respect to the American Ambassador that that is rather what we have been feeling in the last few months.
It seems to me that if we ourselves—and this is what I am hoping the Prime Minister is going to achieve by his visits to the President of the United States—can come back and accept our responsibilities jointly with the other United Nations countries, then perhaps something can be done. What are those responsibilities? The right hon. Member for Ipswich has put his finger on it there. In the first place, our responsibilities are governed by parallel obligations. In the past we have given a definite assurance to the Jews, on the one hand, and we have given an exactly opposite assurance to the Arabs.

Mr. Stokes: Mr. Stokes indicated dissent.

Mr. Gough: The right hon. Gentleman shakes his head, but that is the way in which it is interpreted in those various countries. It may be wrongly interpreted, but that is what bedevils the situation today.
I do not think I agree with my hon. Friend the Member for Farnham that we should immediately be fatalistic and say that a settlement must be imposed between the Israelis and the Arabs. Of course, we have got to do everything we can to bring these two sides together, but I do not believe that the United Nations —I would almost call it the "so-called United Nations"—as it is constituted today without the French and the British could even begin to succeed.
If we are realists—and I am trying not to be controversial—let us see what is happening. The United Nations gave an assurance to ourselves, to the French and, far more important, to the Israelis that when the Israelis moved out of the Gaza Strip and out of Aqaba the United Nations would take over. That is how I as an ordinary person understood it.
What happened? Up bobbed Colonel Nasser. What did the United Nations say to him? It said very little indeed.
It seems that there must be the authority of the large number of the free nations of the world represented in the United Nations so that Colonel Nasser will realise that because those free nations, including Britain. France and Israel, being law-abiding countries, agree to accept the United Nations settlement, he himself has also got to accept it.
There are several things that we ourselves can do, but first we should also look to our other responsibilities. Our responsibilities in the Middle East are not only the obligations which we assumed—the Arabs on the one side and the Jews on the other. We also have an obligation with regard to the fuel oil which is coming to this country, and that is a very serious matter.
I would ask the House to turn its mind to the other side of the Middle East, to the Persian Gulf. We ought to give a bouquet where it is due, to those small Sheikhdoms of Bahrain and Kuwait which have supported us and have not deserted us during these trying months. This is particularly the case in Bahrain, where there was a tremendous infiltration of Colonel Nasser's agents. They dealt with that matter and it now looks as if that little State is on a very firm footing.
I have heard during this debate that so many of these Arab States do not look after their people and that their people live in misery. That is unfortunately true, but it is not true of those two Sheikhdoms, both of which have accepted their responsibilities and are doing their best to raise the standard of their people.
What can we do here at home to ease the situation relating to our terrific need for the products of the Middle East? When we need a product which comes from the Middle East, when our whole lifeblood depends upon it, we are in a difficult position when it comes to getting round the bargaining table. The late Mr. Bevin emphasised that fact. The best way of bargaining is to be strong. Our position at the moment is lamentably weak in that every part of our industry is dependent utterly and completely upon the flow of oil, most of which comes from the Middle East.
Two points emerge in this connection, and I hope that they will be passed on to the Ministers concerned. The first one —I hope I am not outside the rules of order, because this concerns the flow of oil from the Middle East—relates to the way in which we waste the oil when it comes here. I cannot develop this argument now, but when we are told that we are not able to spend sufficient money on improving our roads so that we may avoid these traffic jams, it seems to me that we are also imposing a self-inflicted wound on ourselves. We are wasting thousands of millions of tons of fuel oil in this country, and it is all having to come to us perhaps in those large tankers which the right hon. Member for Ipswich mentioned or through the Canal when it is opened. That is on the one side.
On the other side, as was said by the hon. Member for Wednesbury (Mr. Stonehouse) in his impressive maiden speech, we are finding that year by year the tonnage of fuel oil from the Middle East is increasing sharply. Therefore, if any of our industries could utilise another form of power—and I am not saying that we should wait for the atomic age—in order to ease that load, then we should be in a far stronger position.
I ask my right hon. Friend to draw the attention of the Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries and the Minister of Power to the development of methane gas in the countryside. I will say no more on that subject now, except that if this source of power were pursued with energy it is possible that we should be able to save ourselves an enormous amount of fuel oil and thereby put ourselves in a stronger position.
I also want to refer to the contribution that we could make in the matter of defence if we were brought back fully into the United Nations. I recently went with a Parliamentary delegation to Kenya, and I have been studying the effects upon us of the last crisis which we suffered. It seems to me that there is a possibility —I say no more than that—of the whole of the southern Mediterranean seaboard falling into the hands of people hostile to us and to N.A.T.O. Had that situation arisen, our present position in Cyprus and Malta, and, indeed, throughout the Mediterranean, would have been extremely gravely jeopardised. I believe that if we are to play our part in the


Middle East settlement we can do more for the defence of the Middle East by building up military headquarters—naval, air and land—in Kenya.
With the United Nations as it is now constituted, with France and ourselves outside it, I do not believe that any sort of settlement will be reached in the Middle East. I agree with my hon. Friend the Member for Farnham that as a result of that the United Nations will be broken in the process. If that happens, it will be one of the greatest disasters of the twentieth century. On the other hand, if we are brought back and given a chance to play a full part in United Nations affairs and in United Nations deliberations about the Middle East, I believe there is a very good chance, through patience and through using our persuasion to bring Jews and Arabs together, that a lasting peace can be achieved.

7.12 p.m.

Mr. J. Grimond: A great deal of what has been said from the other side of the House is very alarming. There is general agreement about many desirable objectives in the Middle East, but how are we to reach those objectives? It is the Government's policy to reach them through the United Nations. Yet when the Foreign Secretary was speaking I felt that he himself had no faith in the United Nations. I have also felt that practically every other Conservative hon. Member who has spoken since has no faith in the United Nations.
It seems to me that we are making exactly the same error as led us into Suez. We continue to invoke words in which we have no belief whatever, and when the crisis comes we shall no doubt say that we never believed them after all. It was the same with the Tripartite Declaration before Suez. It was quoted as being the cornerstone of the Government's policy, until a situation arose in which it had to be invoked, and then it was not invoked.
If it really is the view of the Government that the United Nations is not capable of carrying out its policy in the Middle East, it would be better for them to say so. We might then consider whether there is another way of doing it. It is conceivable that we might have another declaration of a sort, something on the lines of the Tripartite Declaration. It creates a dangerous situation to

go on saying that it would be a tragedy if the United Nations failed, implying all the time that United Nations is something quite separate from us and that it will be no concern of ours if it fails. It is the only instrument that we have for carrying out our policy.
If we are to work through the United Nations—I agree entirely with the hon. Member for Horsham (Mr. Gough) that it is very undesirable that we should be pushed out of it; nevertheless, we have put ourselves in some difficulty by our actions in the last three or four months —and if we are to go back into it, I believe we must go back into it as part of the Commonwealth. There has been very little mention in the debate of the rôle which Canada, for instance, is playing and can play today. It is an extremely important one. If we want to make our weight felt, we must get a common policy with Canada.
I would go further than that and say that if we are to work through the United Nations in the Middle East we should make every effort to work with India. So far India has not been mentioned. I know there has been a feeling that India at the time of the original Suez trouble was very disloyal and so forth, but, looking back, I am rather of the opinion that we should have paid much more attention to Mr. Nehru's proposals. We should now be very unwise to sweep India aside on the grounds of Kashmir and say that her influence is of no value to us.
Whether we think the United Nations is a good or a bad instrument, it is today an immensely important factor in American life. When the Joint Under-Secretary of State goes to America, I hope he will look into this aspect. The United Nations has a far greater significance in American life in many ways today than Congress has. It is televised all over America. It is news. Its headquarters is a place which people visit. It is a living entity in a way which it is not in this country.
We ought to send to the United Nations people who are capable not only of putting our point of view, but of getting it across. I do not know whether we are achieving that now. At the time of Suez I was in New York, and I know that we left it to a civil servant who


was most admirable but did not have the standing to enable him to get our point of view across. At one time, we had Sir Gladwyn Jebb there. He is the sort of man to use the United Nations as a platform and put the British point of view. I believe that we have to use the United Nations. I believe it will develop.
Another very important matter to which little attention has been paid in this country is the changing rôles of the Assembly and the Council. Some people feel that the Assembly has far overstepped its true function. That may be so. At all events, the United Nations itself is obviously undergoing change, and it is vital that we and the Commonwealth should make our views known there at this moment.
Another thing that we must do very quickly is to have some plain, friendly speaking with the Americans about "colonialism." This 'bedevils a great deal of our relations, and the sooner we get some agreement on it the better. I think we can get it, because it is largely a misconception. In the light of what has happened in Ghana, it is absurd to pretend that we are the oppressors of all the coloured nations.
Clearly, in the Middle East itself the major objective of Britain is stability, partly so that we can obtain oil, and the major conflict in the Middle East is Arab-Israeli hate. I notice that Mr. Macdonald, when giving evidence before a Senate Committee, said that we must:
… recognise that Israel/Arab understanding is an essential preliminary to effective measures for the defence of the West's vital interests, including oil.
I do not think this can be done quickly. A great deal of misconception is spread about by the feeling that we can do something in a few months, by some gimmick, to settle the problem, but that cannot happen. It is we who have created the problem, although from the best of motives. The Jews did not create it. The Arabs did not create it. All the irritation that is engendered between Jews and Arabs has been started by the Western world and the Russians, because we persecuted the Jews and then shipped them to Palestine. We should look forward to the day when Israel becomes a genuine Middle Eastern country and takes a lead there. So long as she is

regarded as an outpost of what is called "Western colonialism", there will be trouble. She must become the leading nation in the Middle East and a part of it.

Mr. Gough: For the sake of the record, surely the hon. Gentleman made a slip of the tongue. We have never persecuted the Jews.

Mr. Grimond: I am grateful. I was referring to the Western world as a whole.
I hope the Foreign Secretary is right in saying that there is a slackening of tempo. I should have thought that the developments in Jordan were rather dangerous. I believe that Glubb had a restraining influence on the frontiers there. I should have thought that there is every sign that there may be a breakup with Jordan, which we should very much regret and which we hope will not happen, but if it happened it might well start all sorts of movements on both the Arab side and the Israel side.
Therefore, I believe that it is very vital indeed to throw the whole weight of the Commonwealth into the United Nations in order to achieve some of the things to which reference has already been made. If we can only get a few refugees settled we may start a trickle. Even if we settled quite a small number of refugees and they were contented and prosperous and messages came back to the camps to say "So and so is doing well and making a good living", we would break the log jam. With money, I believe that, even against the hostility of the Arabs, a beginning could be made.
Have we now given up any hope of the United Nations, through, say, the World Bank, actually buying part of the Gaza Strip or of the Sinai Peninsula? This did seem a possible way of easing Colonel Nasser's ego—giving him some money to spend on dams and so on and, at the same time, making a base there. I believe that the United Nations has to stay along the frontier. We have, of course, to have small adjustments, but the United Nations must then impose peace along the frontier.
One read in the newspapers only today that the "Voice of the Arabs" says:
The Gulf of Aqaba will be closed to the ships of Israel and our commandos will continue to sow terror in Israel.


Therefore, I add my voice to those hon. Members who have spoken; we have not much time to lose, and we must make it clear that the United Nations will build up a force which will stay there for a very considerable period.

Viscount Hinchingbrooke: The hon. Member has just been saying that the situation is extremely fluid, that Jordan may break lip at any moment, and that there may be great movements. What sort of situation is he trying to guarantee? Does he really want to put these troops all round the frontiers now, keeping that part of the world permanently in the exact geographical state that it was in after the Arab-Israeli war of 1948?

Mr. Grimond: I agree that we have to develop machinery, through the United Nations, for changing the situation, for altering the frontiers and for ringing the Arabs and Jews together, we hope, in the long run, and finding a permanent settlement. But that is a very long job. Meantime, we have to put a strong observer force or troops along the frontier to prevent a recurrence of conflict. I should have thought that Mr. Ben Gurion had every right to demand that as a minimum, and I should have thought that the sooner it was done the easier it would be.
As to the Canal, I understood from the Foreign Secretary that we are going back to the proposals of October which. I am sure, is the right starting point. But we have made no progress about the dates and to when they are to be paid; and I was not quite sure just what the position of the Suez Canal Users' Association is in this. Are we to be told whether it is still in existence, and, if it is, its present purpose?
I would agree with the right hon. and gallant Gentleman the Member for Leicester, South-East (Captain Waterhouse), that if the worst comes to the worse, so to speak, there is a great deal to be said for moving our shipping round the Cape. I cannot go so far with him as to say that we should actually blockade the Canal, because we ourselves are extremely vulnerable to blockade, extremely vulnerable to a cutting off not only of our oil but also of our dollar flow. But we should put more round the Cape, though I am afraid that with the increasing demands for oil we shall need the

Canal also, if we can get it. Nevertheless, I should have no objection to that sanction.
The need for stability and the Arab-Jew situation is tied up with the internal conditions of the Arab States themselves. In the Arab States there is the danger of Communism internally, and also a danger of anarchy. Personally, I think the danger of external attack by Russia has been greatly exaggerated. As Mr. Macdonald said:
Communist Russia has no need now for military aggression in the Middle East. It can wait confident that its subversive tactics—if uncountered by the West—can achieve the replacement of Western influence by that of the Kremlin throughout the Middle East.
We have inevitably brought Russia into the Middle East, as we have brought in the United Nations. I was against bringing in Russia. But now that she has come in, and must come in, it would be much better to accept the fact, bring her in openly and try to negotiate with her. I am in entire agreement with those who say that the counter to Communism is greater technical aid. The Arab States do not need money so much as the technical aid to enable them to spend it properly. Iraq actually had some oil revenues unspent because she has not that means to spend them.
I also agree that propaganda is extremely important, but I do feel that what the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Ebbw Vale (Mr. Bevan) has said about the Russian proposals needed saying. Except for one, I cannot see how we can possibly object to those proposals. The first is for the settlement of all outstanding issues through peaceful negotiation. We can have no objection to that. Then, there is non-intervention in the domestic affairs of countries.
The only one, I suppose, that we could object to is the dropping of attempts to involve Middle Eastern countries in military blocs. I should have thought that a negotiable point. I am not quite clear whether we gain as much as we lose by involving ourselves in these blocs. If the Russians attack the Middle East, we have the Eisenhower doctrine and the ultimate deterrent of the hydrogen bomb. Do we really need to be directly involved in these blocs, or is this a negotiable matter? I should have thought it worth calling the Russians' bluff, as it were.
I certainly believe that it is not really worth while to keep our actual bases there in the old way. In such places as Iraq it would do far more harm than good, and the time has come to withdraw them.
As for the Eisenhower doctrine, it does give us the assurance of the ultimate backing of America, but it does not meet the difficulty of internal Communism. That has to be met by paying a fair price for oil and seeing that the proceeds are used for genuine development.
It is very important not to let down Iraq and Pakistan, but the northern tier is not a direct Iraqi concern at all, and her contribution is very small. It is all a question of whether we do not lose more than we gain by these alliances in their present form. If we could get some quid pro quo from the Russians, and if the flow of arms were really stopped and we could make bargains in other parts of the world, I should have thought these proposals would open up possibilities and should not be rejected out of hand.
Finally, I would just say this about oil. We have to buy the oil. We must get back to the position of buying things and paying a fair price for them, and not going in and claiming sovereignty over the countries producing them. But oil is of such importance to the Middle East countries and to ourselves that there is a lot to be said for having the arrangements now existing between the oil companies and the producing States brought under some form of international treaty. I believe that there is everything to be said for setting up, under the United Nations, a development board of some sort to apply the oil proceeds. I do not entirely share the confidence expressed by the hon. Member for Horsham (Mr. Gough) about Kuwait and Bahrain. It is true that they are very rich, but it is very difficult to believe that they will indefinitely continue to exist as small autocratic entities on the edge of the coast and will not one day be nipped off unless, in the meantime, we spread the oil revenues further among the Arab States and bring them into political association with their neighbours.
We have to help in the Middle East, but we have also to stop identifying ourselves with particular political parties in Arab countries. We are stopping that

now, but we used to do it, and it is futile. The Arabs, whether we like it or not, mean to run their own affairs. We have to go in, as equals, to help them. We have to protect the Jews against aggression and we have to make the United Nations work.
I repeat what I said at the beginning—if we really have no faith in the United Nations, let us say so now and see if we cannot get something else to work, but if we are to pin our policy on to the United Nations, we have to go in with India, Canada and the Commonwealth as a whole, and see that the very desirable objectives about which we have heard today are actually realised.

7.29 p.m.

Lieut,-Colonel Wentworth Schofield: Nearly every hon. Member who has spoken today has referred to the question of oil in the Middle East, and it is to that particular topic that I wish to devote my remarks this evening. It is becoming more clear every day how the mind of Colonel Nasser has been working. The moment that he claimed sovereignty over the Canal it was clear that he wanted the Canal not for the revenue which he could thereby obtain but for the power which possession of the Canal would place in his hands. Every step he has taken since he became the dictator of Egypt has been designed to that end. First, it was necessary that he should get the British forces oat of the Canal Zone. After he had accomplished that, it was merely a matter of time before he took the next step, the so-called nationalisation of the Canal. He took that step in July last year by simple declaration claiming sovereignty over the Canal and declaring that it was the property of Egypt. Subsequent events have shown how great was the power which he then acquired.
The closing of the Canal more than anything else has brought home to the people of Europe, and of this country in particular, our absolute dependence on oil from the Middle East. That is not to say, of course, that we are not dependent also upon other things which are carried through the Canal. That is why there must be guarantees for keeping the Canal open. What has been made crystal clear is that nothing which comes through the Canal has such an immediate effect upon the economy of this country as a stoppage or delay in the flow of oil. No one knows


this better than Colonel Nasser. Ever since the United Nations recognised his right to determine when and how the clearing of the Canal should be effected, he has been able to dictate every move. Since the British and French forces have left Port Said, we have seen how the Canal can be put out of action and, indeed, kept out of action by the whim of one man in delaying its clearance. We have seen how Colonel Nasser has been able to hold to ransom not only Europe but the United Nations as well until he got his own way. I submit that, unless some alternative means of getting Middle East oil to Europe can be found, we shall always be in danger of suffering the great humiliation of being under the thumb of the Egyptian dictator.
Means must be found whereby the vital supplies of oil can be brought from the Middle East to this country, by-passing the Canal. It is my view that the days of the Suez Canal are numbered, certainly as a profitable enterprise. Once there are large super-tankers in sufficient numbers, tankers such as those which are on the stocks today and which will go on the stocks in greater numbers, carrying or capable of carrying 80,000 to 100,000 tons of crude oil, it will be found much more economical to send them round the Cape than to send oil by the smaller type of tanker which, has to go through the Canal.
Before we look at the possibility of alternative means, let us first consider the Canal, its background and its disabilities. As hon. Members may be aware, because of the vastly increased oil traffic through the Canal in recent years, it has been found necessary on several occasions to widen or deepen the Canal in order to keep pace with the growing demand.
For the most part, the Canal will allow ships to proceed in one direction only at a time. This, of course, necessitates an elaborate system of convoys. The speed of passage through the Canal is virtually limited to 7 knots, and only ships drawing 36 ft. or less can pass through the Canal at all. By 1955, which was the last complete year we can take for the supply of oil coming through the Canal because the year 1956 was a broken year, oil traffic through the Canal represented 67 million tons out of a total of 107 million tons of all shipping which passed through the Canal. In other words, two-thirds of

the total tonnage which passes through the Canal is oil.
At present, the only alternative to the Canal is the long route via the Cape. I suggest that another means could be provided by running an oil pipeline from the northern tip of the Gulf of Aqaba to the East Mediterranean coast in the region of Gaza, the pipeline running through a strip of Sinai territory about 20 miles wide which runs along the Israeli-Sinai border. The territory through which the pipeline would pass should, in my opinion, be owned and administered by some international authority, for preference the United Nations organisation. I was pleased to hear this afternoon my right hon. and learned Friend the Foreign Secretary say that he felt that the Gaza Strip should be internationalised. I would take it further by carrying the strip 160 miles along the Egyptian-Israeli border.
Such a pipeline laid through that strip would provide a trans-shipment route for part or, if need be, for the whole of the oil which normally passes through the Suez Canal. Tankers from the Persian Gulf could discharge their oil cargoes at the Aqaba end of the pipeline. The oil could be pumped from there direct to tankers in the Mediterranean in the region of Gaza because, fortunately, the Gulf of Aqaba at the terminal point of the pipeline is blessed with very deep water indeed, certainly sufficient to accommodate any type of tanker. If my memory serves me aright, the depth is no less than 65 ft. close to the shore. At the Gaza end of the pipeline the coast is straight and shelves uniformly to a depth of 60 ft. within one mile of the coast. That again is deep enough for any tankers.
At the Mediterranean end of the pipeline, there would be no difficulty in pumping the oil direct into the tankers. All that would be necessary would be an extension of the pipeline by submarine pipes from the shore end at the Gaza terminal, and the actual connections could he made to the tankers by flexible hose. There is nothing new in this. The method is already being used about 250 miles further north at Banias, which is the terminal end of the pipe coming from Kirkuk, operated by the Iraq Petroleum Company.
I am informed by experts of great experience in the laying and operating of pipelines in the Middle East that the


scheme is both practical and sound. It is estimated that the scheme would require three pumping stations dispersed along the pipeline to pump the oil from the Aqaba terminal to the Mediterranean. These, together with four 30-in. diameter pipes, 160 miles long, complete with storage tanks, jetties, submarine pipes, and encampment dwellings for staff could be put down at a cost of approximately £60 million. Given priority, the whole installation could be completed in a matter of eighteen months. The estimated cost of conveying oil by this method of a pipeline from Aqaba to the Mediterranean would be less than that of taking the oil through the Canal.

Mr. Janner: I am very interested in the point the hon. and gallant Member is putting. The only modification I ask him to consider is that, in the event of any interference with the terminal in the Gaza Strip, I think he will agree there is a possibility of a terminal being placed somewhere else leading into the Mediterranean. This is an extremely important matter with which the hon. and gallant Member is dealing.

Lieut.-Colonel Schofield: I quite agree with the hon. Member, but as I develop my agrument I think he will find that I have provided for that.
Before the Canal was closed, the toll charge was 6s. 3d. a ton. It is absolutely certain that when the Canal is opened the charges will go up. Someone will have to pay for this long stoppage, the extra maintenance, deepening and one thing and another which will have to be done. We can be absolutely certain that the Canal charges will go up. The figures I have given are not just a rough and ready calculation. They have been properly costed, the area has been surveyed and this has been discussed with members of the oil industry, who have much experience of constructing and operating pipelines in the Middle East. They have agreed that the figures given are substantially correct.
The one essential for its success, however, is that the strip through which it must pass shall be an international buffer zone between Egypt and Israel. The reason I have suggested that it should be twenty miles in width is to provide for diversions of the pipe to circumvent

obstacles which may be found in that area. In addition, it would provide a buffer zone which, more than anything else at present, is required between Egypt and Israelis.
It has also been costed out that it would be possible to pump oil from the Aqaba end to the Mediterranean terminal at no less than 2s. a ton cheaper than taking it through the Canal, based on the pre-stoppage Canal charge of 6s. 3d. I put forward this suggestion, not only as one which would provide a buffer zone to keep the Israelis and Egyptians apart, but also as a business proposition for bringing the oil in the cheapest possible way from the Persian Gulf to this country.
I feel that so long as Egyptian and Israeli forces are able to face each other there will always be a serious risk of war. This neutral territory could be put between them and, if thought necessary, it could be manned by United Nations police or troops. The scheme could be self-supporting. The money obtained by pumping the oil would provide for any occupation of the zone. It is a business proposition from every point of view. I hope the Foreign Secretary will take note of it because some day a settlement will have to be made. We understand that the United Nations is engaged in trying to find a settlement. This is one way in which it could use its authority to bring such a settlement about.

7.45 p.m.

Mr. Sydney Silverman: The hon. and gallant Member for Rochdale (Lieut.-Colonel Schofield) has made a businesslike, practical speech with a limited end. During the first half of his speech, I thought it might well have been a speech made by the managing director in a difficult moment to the assembled shareholders of the Suez Canal Company, but, as he proceeded, I thought he had a wider aim and was really putting out the prospectus of a new company to carry on the work of what he regards as a defunct commercial concern.
I do not say that disrespectfully. I hope the hon. and gallant Member will believe me when I put it that way, because it seems to me that what the House of Commons is concerned with in dealing with these matters is not any


of the individual questions which give so many of us real anxiety. The menace to this country and the menace to the world is not the Suez Canal question, or even the passage of oil, or even the Israeli-Arab conflict. All those are symptoms only. They would not matter in a healthy world. They matter only because we are living in a world which is divided, which is not spiritually at peace although it is not actually fighting, and where actual peace is precarious.
If war, the dreaded third world war, were to break out within the next ten years, I suppose the Middle East is the most likely area which would provide the pretext on which the organisation of world peace would break down. It seems to me that we have to consider all these questions against that background. I thought my right hon. Friend the Member for Ebbw Vale (Mr. Bevan) was absolutely right when he condemned the speech of the Foreign Secretary, in so far as it dealt with ultimate policy, as barren in the extreme. The most disappointing part of what otherwise has been a well-informed, a well-balanced and a most interesting debate, is that no other hon. Member who took part in it referred to that aspect of the matter at all until the hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland (Mr. Grimond), speaking for the Liberal Party a little while ago, brought our attention back to what actually is the really fundamental problem in this matter.
My right hon. Friend the Member for Ipswich (Mr. Stokes) who—if I may quote myself on a previous occasion—has again blown in, blown off and blown out, made a speech in which he declared himself to be a pro-Arab and an anti-Zionist. He added, and I for one believe utterly in his sincerity in what he said on this matter, that he was not anti-Jew and saw no reason why being pro-Arab should make a man anti-Jew, although he thought it might make him anti-Zionist. It will not take anyone in this House by surprise when I say that I am not impartial in this matter. I am a Jew, I am a Zionist, and it is only right that it should be made clear that I approach the problems of this part of the world with, as it were, a preconceived sympathy. Why should I not?
I do not agree with the hon. Member who said that it was the Western world that had created Zionism or had created

the State of Israel and that it was persecution alone that made Jews wish to recreate their nation and give it a place in the world where it could live normally as other nations live. I believe that if there had never been any persecution at all, at any time, the Jews would still have wanted and ultimately still would have succeeded in establishing for themselves what is essential for them as for other people. I do not think that it is a question of what Mr. Speaker referred to earlier today as "pugnacious nationalism". It is a desire to be normal —perhaps the most fundamental of all human desires.
But by the time we had reached the year 1945, with all that had happened in the six years of war and, in particular, with what had happened to two-thirds of the Jewish population of Europe in the concentration camps in which people who had survived miraculously against all reason were still dragging out hopeless, miserable lives, there had come about a situation in which the creation of the State of Israel became a political inevitability.
It seems to me that that fact will have to be recognised by the Arabs. It will have to be accepted as a fact that the people of Israel have established their nation in their State and that they cannot be overthrown or driven into the sea. But that does not mean at all that anyone in his senses can conceive of the possibility of Israel maintaining a permanent existence on the basis of permanent hostility to all her Arab neighbours. The hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland was right when he said that it is a condition of the continuance of a Jewish State in the Middle East that it shall be a Middle Eastern State, living in Middle Eastern conditions, living at peace with its neighbours, and making its contributions to world civilisation through and in that area.

Mr. Bernard Braine: That is what it wants to do.

Mr. Silverman: The hon. Member is perfectly right, and I am delighted to find myself for once in full agreement with him. It is a great mistake to suppose, as many people have supposed, that there is some permanent irreconcilability between the Arab and the Jewish outlook.

Mr. Philip Bell: The impression that I have, and perhaps the hon. Member will contradict it, is that the State of Israel is not really viable and cannot live on its trade and possibly will be forced to expand its frontiers. That is what the Arab thinks.

Mr. Silverman: If the hon. and learned Member will do me the honour of hearing the rest of what I have to say, and if by that time I have not dealt with that point, I shall be delighted to answer it, but I do not want to deal with these matters piecemeal because that would make my speech too long. I think that there is no ultimate irreconcilability between Israeli and Arab interests involved in this matter at all, and no racial antagonism.

Mr. Godfrey Nicholson: They are cousins.

Mr. Silverman: They are, of course, racial cousins. Their languages are not the same, but they are certainly closely allied. They have, in many ways, a common background and, but for circumstances for which neither is responsible, there is no reason in the world why Israel should not be able to form, some day, some part of a general Arab Middle Eastern federation and play a loyal part with cousin Arab States in such a situation. That is perfectly true, and it is exactly what I was trying to say. It is equally true, of course, that that is not the present situation. We have a long way to go before the Arab States, certainly under their present leadership, can be brought to appreciate that that is really the only ultimate way out.
There is a long way to go, indeed, and therefore, while one begins by recognising that there is not any kind of fundamental antagonism or any kind of ultimate irreconcilability, there is at this moment the greatest difficulty in the world. The Israelis' immediate difficulty is to survive at all. Just as one cannot conceive of a State of Israel living in permanent hostility to all its neighbours, so indeed those who wanted to establish a State to go on and make its own renewed contribution to the civilisation of the world never expected it to endure on the basis of depending on foreign economic help or foreign military alliances in order to maintain a precarious security on the edge

of the sea, surrounded by a ring of hostile neighbours.
The foundation of the State of Israel was not a foundation by the United Nations. The State of Israel exists because it established itself by its own efforts. The United Nations was brought slowly, reluctantly and with difficulty to recognise the accomplished fact but, after all, it had to be accomplished first, and it was accomplished first. In that situation, Israel has been compelled to live in conditions of indescribable insecurity as well as in conditions of the greatest economic difficulties ever since its foundation in 1948. Its Arab neighbours have refused to recognise its existence at all. They have made no secret of their ambition to do some day soon what they failed to do in 1948—that is, to exterminate the State altogether and drive its inhabitants into the sea.
I cannot understand how anyone in those circumstances ever brought himself to describe what the Israelis did at the end of October, 1956, as an act of aggression. This is the greatest nonsense in the world. Even technically it is the greatest nonsense in the world. An act of aggression can only be an act of war committed by one State upon another State. Nothing else in international law is recognised as aggression. And since Egypt has always said, and still says, that Israel does not exist at all as a State, she is in a difficult position if she says that this non-existent State committed, under international law, an act of aggresion upon her. If we get over that technical difficulty, we are bang up against another equally insurmountable difficulty, because it is not possible for Egypt to claim at one and the same time belligerent rights and immunity from attack.
If it is said that one can keep Israeli ships out of the Suez Canal because one is exercising normal belligerent rights and can blockade the Israelis in the Gulf of Aqaba by the exercise of belligerent rights, then one cannot claim at the same time that the people against whom one is exercising belligerent rights have no right to fight back and if they do fight back they are guilty of aggression. That is complete and utter nonsense, and always was.
It can be said—and one must be absolutely fair and frank about it—that there undoubtedly was at the end of October a


breach of the armistice agreement, but a breach of the armistice agreement is not an act of aggression necessarily under the United Nations Charter. Of course it is not. Everyone knows that so far as the Gaza Strip is concerned the armistice agreement had been a dead letter for at least four or five years, so really this notion that there was some great act of aggression committed by Israel and that the United Nations had the same right as it had against this country and against France seems to me to be complete nonsense.
If Israel made any mistake, it was not a mistake about international law. It was a political mistake, and it may have been a political mistake of very great importance. I agree with the hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland, who spoke for the Liberal Party, when he asked to what this hatred—if that is the right word— this deep-rooted suspicion, this determined hostility of the Arab world to the State of Israel is due if it is not due to racial incompatibility or any real conflict of interests. As the hon. Member said, and as another hon. Member implied in an intervention just now, it is due to the feeling in the Arab world that the State of Israel is not a genuine State at all; that it is an artificial affair created by the Western Powers for their own purposes in order to provide the colonisers and the imperialists with a spearhead or a bridgehead with which they could again enter, as it were by the side door, the area from which they had been expelled at the front.
I entirely agree that conditions of understanding and co-operation between Israel and the Arab world will never be achieved until somehow or other that obsession has been removed from the Arab mind. I should have thought that if there was a mistake made by the Israelis it was a political mistake of either being in connivance or in collusion, or seeming to be in connivance or in collusion, with Britain and France at a time when Britain and France were indeed acting without legal authority under international law and without any real need.
It will be all the more difficult for a generation now to persuade the Arabs that their obsession was ill-founded, because they will say, "When we were in our greatest need the Israelis were found

fighting at the same time side by side with those whom we most feared." I say that because I think that it is probably true. I am not saying that Israel is to be blamed for it; not at all. In the circumstances in which she was placed obviously she had to act, because her very security has been imperilled over all these years. That was the situation.
What is the situation now? Now the United States of America has come in to play the part that this country played with such ill-success for the better part of two generations. Now it is being said —the Foreign Secretary himself said it—"Of course you must look forward as we do." One remembers how this whole controversy in its most critical phase was bedevilled by the late Ernest Bevin who went on declaring day in and day out on suitable and unsuitable occasions, "There will never be any settlement to which the Arabs do not agree." We said to him, "What you are doing by saying that is to give the Arabs a veto on any settlement at all, because if there is not going to be any settlement unless they agree, all they have to do is to fail to agree and the settlement is postponed to the Greek Kalends."
It seems to me that peace will have to be maintained in the end by an imposed settlement for a limited period on something like the lines set out by the Foreign Secretary, although I am bound to say I was horrified at what led to the interruption which caused a certain amount of impatience among hon. Members opposite—to hear the second terms of his offer: a guarantee to the Arab world against Zionist expansionism. Of course they are entitled to that. Then he looked to the corresponding guarantee to the State of Israel, and what was it? It was to be guaranteed against extermination. It seemed to be a minimal guarantee. I cannot understand why that kind of language was used unless it was used in order to maintain in the Arab mind the hope that short of extermination they could have territorial sacrifices at Israel's expense.

Mr. K. Zilliacus: Is my hon. Friend aware that under the Three-Power Declaration there was a guarantee of the armistice lines against aggression? If that has gone, what has been put in its place by the Government?

Mr. Silverman: I am not going to concede, and I hope that no one is going to accept it yet, that the Government have withdrawn from their guarantee under the Tripartite Agreement of the frontiers as they stand. I hope that perhaps we may have some statement about that at the end of the debate, but I am bound to say that if that wording was not intended to convey the impression that I have somewhat cynically and perhaps brutally set out, if it was not intended, as my right hon. Friend the Member for Ebbw Vale said, to arouse all the doubts and suspicions that were aroused by Sir Anthony Eden's Guildhall speech, I cannot understand how they brought themselves to use such unfortunate phraseology. I hope that if it was used inadvertently, although I cannot understand how such language came to be used inadvertently, a correction will be made at the end by whoever is to make the final speech for the Government.
Finally, I would say that if we are to read any sense whatever into the Eisenhower doctrine, it can only mean that the United States of America is going to play the extremely sinister part in its effects—I am not talking about intentions—which this country has played in this matter for the past twenty years, and that is to play off Jew against Arab and Arab against Jew; this part of the Arab world against that part of the Arab world.

Viscount Hinchingbrooke: That is not true.

Mr. Silverman: It is true. I can well conceive that there might be different views about the degree of intention behind it. There may be different views about the motives, there may be different views even about the historical necessity, but I cannot conceive that there can be any different view about the facts. It is so. It is so, and under the Eisenhower doctrine this is exactly what will be done all over again.

Viscount Hinchingbrooke: There cannot be any facts in the future. It is speculation.

Mr. Silverman: If the noble Lord thinks it worth while to take up time by verbal dialectics of that kind, he must do it for himself later in the debate if he catches your eye, Mr. Deputy-Speaker, if there is any time left.
I hope that what I am saying is reasonably clear. The facts I am talking about are the facts in the past. What I am saying is that I cannot conceive that the Eisenhower doctrine makes any sense unless it makes the sense that it is proposing to do in the future along those lines what we have done with such ill-success, and with such tragic results for ourselves, over the past twenty years.
I think most people would concede what I said at the beginning of my speech about the exceptionally critical nature of international problems in the Middle East. If we add to that the fact that we cannot keep the Soviet Union now out of the Middle East whatever we do—I am not arguing the rights or wrongs of it, they are there; they cannot help but be there, and the Foreign Secretary has admitted repeatedly in answer to questions in this House that obviously they have legitimate interests there—if they have legitimate interests, if we have legitimate interests, if the Americans have legitimate interests, there are only two ways of dealing with the matter.
One is to let each back his own interests against the other, reckless of ultimate consequences. In that way lies ultimate disaster. The other way is to get together and see whether the various conflicting interests can in any way be reconciled. If ultimately, after a genuine and sincere attempt, it turns out that the legitimate interests cannot be reconciled, then we are no worse off than we are now, never having made the attempt. I cannot conceive that any human being, conscious of what might depend upon right or wrong decisions in this matter, would be so irresponsible as to say that if the offer is made of an attempt to reconcile conflicting interests, we should not accept that offer or try to see what can be made of it.
Yet that is exactly what the Foreign Secretary has done in the note delivered to the Soviet Union, and the French Note is to the same effect, as is also the American Note. If we do that, and make no attempt to reach an agreement, what is the alternative? We must expect that they will try to infiltrate as we tried to infiltrate, as the Western nations tried to infiltrate.
Oil is our greatest interest and we are entitled to try to secure it, are we not? There are important strategic and tactical


matters to be considered in this part of the world. Are we not going to consider them? The only question is whether we consider them alone or with our immediate allies or whether we attempt to consider them with others. To say that we will not consider these matters with them at all because we are not sure that their practice lives up to the precept contained in the Note, seems to me to be the sheerest hypocrisy, having regard to all that has been going on since October of last year.
So I say to the Government that if they are to discharge the responsibilities of Government for any time longer, they will take a heavy responsibility before history if they allow the opportunity which has been presented for consultation and agreement to pass without being fully tried out. Let them try it out sincerely. If they fail, they will have done their best, and their consciences will be clear. But to go on in this way, stumbling from crisis to crisis until they are submerged by ultimate catastrophe is to incur a responsibility that no sane man has the right to incur.

8.15 p.m.

Lady Tweedsmuir: The hon. Member for Nelson and Colne (Mr. S. Silverman) certainly does not put a blind faith in the United Nations as does the right hon. Member for Ebbw Vale (Mr. Bevan). When he opened the debate for the Opposition, the right hon. Gentleman posed the problems, but then he skirted happily round how we were to meet them and said finally, "Right, let us send these to the United Nations."
The hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland (Mr. Grimond) asked have we, or have we not, got faith in the United Nations? I think we have to face the matter with realism. The United Nations was a complete failure in Hungary, and this is the last test as to whether it can live up to its obligations. At this late hour I will not go into all the questions of the Suez operation, except to recall to the House that the very reason for the Anglo-French intervention was because the United Nations had, over a period of months, indeed years, failed to solve the problems of the Middle East.
History may well judge the timing of our operation, and certainly the Government's public relations. Yet I am sure that two-thirds of this country were

behind Sir Anthony Eden at that time. We realise perfectly well the immense difficulties that confront our Foreign Secretary now. It seems that America, as the prime mover in seeking the withdrawal of French, British and Israeli forces, has taken on the final responsibility. Indeed, the B.B.C. the other day put rather nicely, I thought, the French reaction to America at that time. It reported that what the French had said could be summed up in three sentences: "We told you so. Now you know where you are. The baby is yours."
It is said that private assurances were given to Israel by the United States that her future security from Egyptian attack would be upheld. Yet it appears that Egypt will shortly demand the withdrawal of United Nations Forces. I am supported by a powerful letter in The Times signed by such eminent people as Professor Gilbert Murray, Lord Halley, Lord Hankey and others which reads:
It cannot be contended that the United Nations will be carrying out the Charter and its duty to maintain international peace and security by restoration of the old frontiers without powerful safeguards.
I want to ask my right hon. and gallant Friend the Minister of State whether, when he replies to the debate, we could have clarification of some of the points raised by the Foreign Secretary earlier. What exactly has happened to the Suez Canal Users' Association? What exactly is the Government's view about the six points adopted by the United Nations? Above all, can we have some more definite assurance about the Government's attitude towards the payment of the Canal dues? If we are, even in a hidden way, to pay the Canal dues to Colonel Nasser, then that really is a final defeat.
As I ventured to say in a debate in November, the United Nations is not an alibi for evading responsibility, and I think that a great many countries which opposed us at the start are beginning to harden to our view. It is a great temptation for all nations to shelter behind the United Nations, and, however much many sincere people in this country may want it to work, I for one do not think that in its present form it can. It is not a judicial body, as we all know. There is no body of law to which all the nations are obliged to conform.
The Charter lays down that only the Security Council can act and the


Assembly can recommend. When Russia used her veto consistently, it was agreed that a new procedure should come about and that the Assembly should be able to make a recommendation on a two-thirds majority, but no nation has ever undertaken to obey the resolutions of the Assembly. Therefore, action can, in fact, only legally be required by the Security Council.
Therefore, this country, as well as many other nations is asking the United Nations to take executive action which is not written into the Charter so far as the Assembly is concerned, and that is the reason for our weakness in the Canal Zone and in Gaza today.
The Labour Party held a campaign in the country saying that we want "Law, not war." The United Nations has no force in law, but I would agree with the Labour Party that we certainly want to do everything we can, and that is very limited, to ensure respect for international obligations, although that is a different question. In this context, America may be cautious now, but I submit that the Afro-Asian group will respect her and those members of the United Nations who are ready not only to honour international agreements between them but to see that they are enforced.
The other day the Canadian Prime Minister, Mr. St. Laurent, said in the Canadian House of Commons that unless Egypt freely agrees to the voice of the United Nations majority in getting the Suez Canal functioning, the only alternative is the use of force. He said he hoped that this would not be necessary. When he was challenged on this point the next day he said he thought he was pointing out an alternative that could not be considered. But, of course, law is no good unless it is enforced. We in this House might just as well face what the United Nations is and does and know exactly where we stand.
Take, for instance, the position of the United Nations Emergency Force, which is now a very critical one. Very shortly, apparently, we shall have two military governors in the Gaza strip. This tiny force is in Egypt only by Egypt's consent. Again, that pinpoints the weakness of the position of Britain as well as that of the other nations under the United Nations Charter at present. People say, "Let

us build up this force." Are we being realistic? Can there really be a police force for one country and not for another? What about turning Russia out of Hungary or America out of Formosa? What vast size of police force would be necessary to enforce action demanded by the Security Council if the veto was not used? Even if such a force were raised, would it be right for an organisation constituted as it is to have so vast a power?
What, then, is left? We have all to recognise that the United Nations has done a very great deal of useful work in many ways, but on the prime issues of war and peace among the great Powers, for the reasons that I have given, the United Nations has not the authority or the moral force. Morality, the ideal, can have influence only if all the nations, great and small, are sure that they have fair and equal justice.
This country has tried, to its peril, to make the League of Nations work, and no man has striven harder than Sir Anthony Eden in that cause, or in the fresh hope given by the United Nations. His going is not only a personal tragedy, but masks the shattered belief that all Governments sincerely want peace. We have now to temper that desire by realising not only that some Governments do not, but that they think they can use the United Nations as they will.
In fact, at present the real power to keep peace rests among those countries which hold the hydrogen bomb as a deterrent. As time goes on more countries will seek protection from those who wield the authority of nuclear power. Equally, we can never escape the fact that if we try to impose economic sanctions, they can really be imposed only on vulnerable countries, not least ourselves.
Therefore, so far as our particular problems in the Middle East are concerned, our only hope at the present time is for America to use her undoubted influence with realism throughout the area, and for ourselves again to take a lead, in both ideas and experience.
I shall not in the short time available try to give the answer—nor do I believe that any other hon. Member would—to the problem of how to keep the world at peace. After all, this is the endless question which mankind has posed since the beginning of time. However, I would


at least ask the House to see the United Nations for what it is, a great endeavour that in some form some day may yet succeed, but which at present is not an alibi for evading responsibility.

8.26 p.m.

Mr. R. H. S. Crossman: In the very few minutes left before the big guns start booming down below, I should like to congratulate the hon. Lady the Member for Aberdeen, South (Lady Tweedsmuir) upon putting very fairly the prevailing view of the Tories about the United Nations. I have never heard anything more defeatist. I should very much like to know whether the Minister of State repudiates or confirms the defeatism of the Government backbench Members.
Because we are discussing the future of the United Nations, I want to spend my few moments discussing the Gaza Strip. The Foreign Secretary and my right hon. Friend the Member for Ebbw Vale (Mr. Bevan) were right in stressing that success or failure in the Gaza Strip in the next four or five weeks will probably decide whether the United Nations can go forward or will be smashed. I do not take a very optimistic view at the moment.
I agree with the Foreign Secretary that this was a unique opportunity for an experiment in international government. Gaza did not belong to either side. It could have been developed as an international area, independent of Egypt and Israel. Throughout we had from Mr. Lester Pearson, of Canada, most constructive proposals along those lines. But those proposals were defeated without even being put to the United Nations, because America had no confidence in them and preferred a weak, watered-down resolution. After that, we had American pressure on Israel to get her out without guarantees and with mere assurances.
I put it to the Minister of State that three facts have recently developed, each very depressing. First, Israel was perfectly prepared to keep her civil administration going and have it slowly removed by stages while an international administration was substituted. That was turned down.
In the second place, U.N.E.F. brought with it, when it entered, no administration at all. One cannot run the Gaza Strip without any preparations beforehand, and

if one wanted to make the experiment fail, then the way that the United Nations entered the Gaza Strip seemed almost deliberately intended for that purpose. It made inevitable what is actually happening. We were glad to hear that Dr. Bunche has denied saying that he handed over gladly to the Egyptians the civil administration. He has not denied saying —I think I am right in saying, and I think the Minister of State will agree with me —that international government is impossible in the Gaza Strip without Egyptian consent. We all know what that means. It means that, sooner or later, and probably sooner, Egyptian administration will come into the Gaza Strip. It has to be ruled by someone. It has either to be ruled by Israel or Egypt or by an international administration, and if Israel is forced out and U.N.E.F. does not rule it then the Egyptians ultimately will.
I wish to make a reference to the leading article in The Times this morning which I think contains a fallacy commonly shared in this House. It states:
The real test will come if Nasser demands the withdrawal of the United Nations force.
I only wish that were true. Nasser would be delighted to have the United Nations force guarding the Gaza Strip and protecting his Fedayeen schools from interference by Israel. He is in a much stronger position if there are no Egyptian forces in the Gaza Strip to be cut off by the Israelis and if his Egyptian administration can be guarded by the United Nations force. I ask the Minister of State whether it is a fact that without Nasser putting a single soldier in the Gaza Strip he could achieve a victory there for Egypt through the United Nations? Could anything be more ironic than that a so-called international police force, which should be there to enforce justice on both sides, should be used cold-bloodedly and skilfully to restore the status quo under which the Fedayeen gangs can proceed with total impunity night after night to enter Israel because they are protected by the United Nations?

Mr. Janner: That has already started.

Mr. Crossman: I ask the Minister of State, what are the Israelis to do when faced with this situation? I should not be surprised, nor could I blame the Israelis, if they decided that they had been double-crossed by the Americans; that


the assurances that they were given meant absolutely nothing, and that they were entitled, in order to survive, to call the Egyptians' bluff and throw them out of the strip.
Someone has said that we cannot do that. I look back to the Korean war when the Chinese Communists decided that they had, in their own self-defence, to chase MacArthur out of the northern part of the peninsula and so safeguard their own security. They did it very satisfactorily from their point of view. They came half-way down the peninsula, and then there was an armistice and they could not be defeated. I would not blame the Israelis if they felt it their duty, even though U.N.E.F, is there, to drive the Egyptians out and clean up the Fedayeen.
I make one other suggestion to the Minister of State. If the United Nations is not going to enforce law and order; if it is merely to be a smoke-screen under which Egyptian aggression can be prepared all over again, it would be far better for the United Nations to withdraw altogether from the Gaza Strip. I think that is something which the hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland (Mr. Grimond) said in his speech. If the United Nations cannot do its job, let it get out, because it is the worst thing of all for the prestige of the United Nations to pretend to do something honourable and to be an accomplice in something totally dishonourable and totally unjust. As a believer in the United Nations, I want to see U.N.E.F. withdraw altogether, if there is no chance of imposing an international regime on Gaza.
It may well be that it really is impossible. Very well. If it is, if the Assembly's Resolutions make it impossible, let there be no U.N.E.F. at all. Let the Egyptians and the Israelis settle this in the old-fashioned way.
Does anybody doubt what would happen in the Gaza Strip if this were settled in the old-fashioned way? It would not last four days like the Sinai campaign; it would last six hours. The strip would be cleaned up, and there would be no more trouble. I know that this is an unpleasant thing to say, but, frankly, I think that would be less unjust, less hypocritical and less unpleasant than the

introduction of an Egyptian administration into the Gaza Strip under cover of an international army.
Let no one believe that because the Egyptian army has not come back the Egyptians will be unhappy. They are delighted. They are not very good at being defended by their own army. They lose every battle. But they have a strange skill at winning each diplomatic move with the help of other people. They win because the Americans have learned nothing from our mistakes. We all know why this appeasement is going on. It is because the Americans have taken over the patronage of the Middle East; the job of bribing the Arabs on to our side by sacrificing the essential rights of the Jews. The Americans are repeating on a vaster scale the mistakes of successive British Foreign Secretaries, and the result will be even vaster failures. That is why I feel so miserable that we have a Government who do not believe in the United Nations, who do not believe in British Imperialism, who do not believe in anything except tagging along behind another great Power which is going the same way to disaster that we went over the last thirty years. For God's sake let us have a Government who believe in the United Nations, because we could save the United Nations if we believed in it, and were determined to have international government in the Gaza Strip.

8.35 p.m.

Mr. Kenneth Younger: Before I make any comment upon the brief but remarkable speech of my hon. Friend the Member for Coventry, East (Mr. Crossman), I should like to touch upon a topic which has not so far been mentioned, although I believe that it falls within the rules of order. I should like to hear whether I am right in believing that news has just reached London from Cyprus of a new truce offer by Eoka, and that this offer is now being studied by Field-Marshal Sir John Harding. If this information is correct it seems to me that it may offer the Government an opportunity—for which we hope and believe they have been looking for some time—to reopen negotiations.
My hon. and right hon. Friends have on several occasions urged upon Eoka to act in this way as a step towards negotiation. We think that there have


been previous occasions when the Government have thrown away certain chances, but I beg them not to throw away this one. I appreciate that the Minister cannot give us a considered policy statement at such short notice, but I very much hope that he will give us some interim assurance that if this offer has really been made it will receive the most careful study, and that there will be no hasty rejection of it.
I turn now to the subject of our debate. For my starting point I want to take the maiden speech of my hon. Friend the Member for Wednesbury (Mr. Stone-house). It will be within the recollection of the House that we on this side were all delighted when he appeared here a few days ago, and having heard him today we are even more delighted that he is among us. He spoke briefly—which is always acceptable in this House—and thoughtfully, and showed himself to be well-informed about a most important aspect of Middle Eastern affairs which very few other hon. Members have mentioned, namely, economics. My right hon. Friend the Member for Ebbw Vale (Mr. Bevan) said something about it, but it has not taken as big a part in this debate as it might have done.
I think that we all appreciate that if we are to solve the problem of the relations either between the Arabs and the Western world or between the Arabs and Israel there must be a big transformation in the Middle East, and probably the biggest agency for this over the years is economic development. My right hon. Friend the Member for Ebbw Vale made two concrete suggestions and a third which was rather more tentative. He suggested that there might be an international scheme on the lines of the Colombo Plan, and a little later he referred to the possibility of a United Nations economic agency. I hope that we may have some comment from the Minister of State. who has just returned from the United Nations, upon one or other of these proposals.
My right hon. Friend also suggested that we should probe Soviet intentions in the economic field. He was rewarded by being told by the hon. Member for Windsor (Sir C. Mott-Radclyffe) that he was very gullible. The hon. Member for Windsor appeared to think that if we entered into any kind of arrangement for economic aid in which the Soviet Union

was involved, the countries receiving Soviet aid would shortly find themselves changing their political colour. Surely that is much more likely to happen if we do not have an arrangement with the Soviet Union.
The Soviet Union cannot be prevented from giving aid to the Middle East, whether it be military or economic, and if she does it on her own it will undoubtedly provide a means of bringing political pressure to bear. Surely this is just what a United Nations agency might prevent. Indeed, the United Nations is partly designed to prevent any appearance of political pressure either from the Soviet side or from the side of the Western powers.

Sir C. Mott-Radelyffe: Will the right hon. Gentleman explain how a United Nations agency could prevent Soviet aid from going into undesirable channels?

Mr. Younger: I cannot suggest that a United Nations agency would prevent the Soviet Union from dispensing other sums through other channels at the same time. but if there were a major scheme under a United Nations agency, which would be highly acceptable to people in the area, and if the Soviet Union were offered an opportunity, as of course she would be, of joining in, she would have the alternatives of contributing, in which case she would have a minimum of opportunity of using her money for political purposes, or of refusing, in which case she would lose a considerable amount of face and influence among the recipient countries.
It was the view of the Foreign Secretary, on the question of the Suez Canal, that we are now back as near as may be to the position of last autumn. He referred to the Resolution of October and to the subsequent exchange of correspondence at the beginning of November. He said—I have not HANSARD, but I have a note—" If Egypt now accepts the six principles of 13th October, a settlement can be achieved." I hope that may be so, but without unduly raking over the old embers we are entitled to point out to the right hon. and learned Gentleman and to his colleagues that if that is to be the basis—it is probably the best basis we can get and is not altogether unsatisfactory—we were practically home on that negotiation before the fatal adventure of


the Anglo-French expedition to Egypt took place.
If we keep this matter on the plane of negotiation and do not resort to force, as we did last autumn, we shall find an enormous number of people ready to support us, including the oil-producing Arab States, and countries like India whom we succeeded in ranging against us at that time. I entirely agree with my right hon. friend the Member for Ipswich (Mr. Stokes) that in negotiation we can have the support of a wide range of countries in all parts of the world. That will be a far better guarantee of the implementation by Egypt of any agreement we may arrive at than any formal safeguard.
We ought to guard against the danger of talking as though Colonel Nasser were in art altogether commanding position in these matters. It is true that he has physical possession of the Canal, but I understand he is in considerable financial difficulty. He is also under financial pressure owing to the risk that if he is intransigent some other way of getting oil from east to west will be found, either by building new tankers or by getting a pipeline overland from Eilat to the Mediterranean. He will also find that some of those who have been his friends at the United Nations will fall away from him, if he proves diplomatically intransigent.
Turning to the Arab-Israel problem, I shall not take up the Akaba question. This is one of the problems in which there is least difficulty about enforcement, and I propose to leave it on one side and turn more to the question of Gaza. Many speakers have mentioned the hard decision that Mr. Ben Gurion took when he decided to order his Israeli troops to withdraw. We know the political difficulty that has caused him at home. He did it on the basis of assurances which have been described as informal. That is fair enough, in the sense that they were not incorporated in any precise way in a resolution of the United Nations. It is now the responsibility of the United Nations to see that these assurances, whether informal or not, are implemented, and not only for the sake of Israel, but also for the sake of the future of the United Nations itself.
I think it would perhaps be worth while if I were to ask the House to bear with me while I put on the record of the

House some at least of the assurances which are incorporated in the Reports of the Secretary-General. It may be that other and even less formal assurances were given by the United States. I do not know what was said, nor do I know what importance can be attached to anything that may have been said in that way. What I propose to read out, however, appears in official United Nations documents in the form of reports by the Secretary-General to the United Nations. The first is dated 11th February, and the relevant part reads as follows:
The General Assembly has stressed the key importance which it attaches to the scrupulous observance by both parties of the terms of the Armistice Agreement between Egypt and Israel. In this regard, the Secretary-General is able to report that the Government of Egypt reaffirms its intent to observe fully the provisions of the Armistice Agreement to which it is a party"—
and that agreement, of course, excludes forays across the frontier—
as indicated earlier in its acceptance of the Resolution of 2nd November, on the assumption, of course, that the observance will he reciprocal. Attention should be drawn in this context to the statement made in paragraph 22 of the last Report from the Secretary General, reporting the desire of the Government of Egypt to put an end to all raids and incursions across the armistice line in both directions, with effective assistance from the United Nations auxiliary organisation to that effect.
If that report by the Secretary-General of an expression of intention by Egypt is accurate, there can be no doubt about the obligation under which the Government of Egypt is today.
May I now rub that in by one further quotation, which comes from a statement made by the Secretary-General to the General Assembly on the 22nd February, part of which I think the right hon. and learned Gentleman the Foreign Secretary quoted? After referring to an expression of opinion by Egypt that it wanted to see a peaceful settlement and that it was prepared to co-operate over refugees, he went on:
…the arrangement for the use of U.N.E.F. in the area should ensure its deployment on the armistice line at the Gaza Strip, and the effective interposition of the Force between the Armed Forces of Egypt and Israel. Similarly, the assistance of the United Nations and its appropriate auxiliary bodies would be enrolled towards putting a definite end to all incursions and raids across the border from either side. Furthermore, with reference in the period of transition"—


and this, I think, was the part which the Foreign Secretary quoted—
such other arrangements with the United Nations may be made as will contribute towards safeguarding life and property in the area by providing efficient and effective police protection;
and so on.
I fully recognise that my hon. Friend the Member for Coventry, East may be all too right in the pessimism which he showed about what may happen in the coming weeks in the Gaza Strip, but, if it should happen, nothing could be clearer than that Egypt will be in direct violation of undertakings officially reported to the General Assembly and accepted, I have no doubt, by the members of that Assembly in taking the line they did about the withdrawal of the Israeli forces. I do not really want to make any further comment upon what my hon. Friend the Member for Coventry, East said, except that I am inclined to agree with him that, if it should turn out that, despite the presence of U.N.E.F., breaches of all these armistice undertakings cannot be prevented, I think it would perhaps be less of a hypocrisy if the U.N. Forces were to go.
Like everyone else, I want to see the U.N. Forces stay as long as possible, but not on the basis of being unable to control the situation and merely providing cover for people to carry on in breach of their undertakings. Egypt, the United States, this country and indeed all the members, including the Afro-Asian members of the Assembly are deeply corn-mated to making these undertakings effective, and if they fail to do so, it will be a near-mortal blow for the United Nations.
There have been a number of questions asked today, some of them couched almost in the form of jeers, to the effect: "What will you do through the United Nations if all these obligations are broken? Where are the sanctions? "I am not going to speculate any more than did my right hon. Friend the Member for Ebbw Vale about all the different possibilities that may arise, but I think that it is right to point out, because this does not seem to be appreciated by those who were jeering, that the difficulty about sanctions is not one that affects the United Nations alone. Who else, do they think, would be able to obtain a

long-term settlement by the use of armed force and armed sanctions? Certainly, we will not do it. We have already tried it. and I do not think we are likely to try it again. Israel cannot do it. No Israeli whom I know thinks that the long-term future of Israel can be secured by armed force. I am quite certain that the United States would not use it, except in so far as force may be in conformity with the United Nations Charter.
We must remind ourselves that, in addition to armed force, there are many other sanctions of a diplomatic kind that can be used if a sufficient number of nations in the world are determined to use them. I think that the United Nations provides the best existing machinery for mobilising pressures of that kind from many quarters.
I support my hon. Friend the Member for Coventry, East in what he said to the hon. Lady the Member for Aberdeen, South (Lady Tweedsmuir)—indeed, it was the same comment as was made by the Leader of the Liberal Party—that those who do not believe in the United Nations should not go around the country pretending that they base their policy upon it. For quite a long time I have been in some doubt whether I aught to appear jointly on United Nations platforms with Conservatives. I shall not appear with the hon. Lady if I am ever asked to do so, and there are a lot of other hon. Members of whom I would say the same.

Lady Tweedsmuir: That would be a great deprivation for myself. It is only fair to point out that I was not jeering at the United Nations. I was pointing out the facts of its constitution, and what it can and cannot do. It is no good burying one's head in the sand about it.

Mr. Younger: The hon. Lady was doing a good deal more than that. What she was really doing was appearing to kill it with kindness.
I want to say one more word on the United Nations side. There have been many criticisms of the Secretary-General, Mr. Hammarskjold. I do not subscribe to them. It is quite true that he has bees what one might call meticulously correct in sticking to the letter of the resolutions regarding Israel's withdrawal, but I think it is true that in his position he had to do this. It was the only way he could


establish the good faith of the United Nations as a mediator. His position in this respect is infinitely more restricted than that of the Foreign Secretary of any of the member States of the United Nations.
Now, it is time to turn to the other side of the penny: namely, Egypt's obligations. I think the fact that the Secretary-General has so far been so correct will turn out greatly to strengthen our hand now that we turn to the other tasks. Israel has now complied with the armistice. In fairness to her and to the United Nations, we have to try to see that the obligations are observed by others.
On the long-term Arab-Israel dispute, I want to say these things which, though platitudinous and often said, constantly seem to be forgotten. The basic factor, I think, is that Israel's existence depends upon peace, whereas on the other side the Arabs have shown that they prefer to maintain a state of war and they continue, right up to recent days, to proclaim their intention of destroying Israel if they can. That is the situation which somehow or other, over a period, we must try to change.
The respective fears on the two sides are in no sense equal On Israel's side, the fear is of actual extermination; she fears for her survival. On the Arab side, the worst that can be said is that there are fears about Arab prestige and about interests which the various Arab States may consider important, but which are certainly not life and death interests. We have been told on several occasions that the Arabs are afraid of Zionist expansion, and a most extraordinary statement is attributed to President Nasser, in, I think, The Times today, in which he claims that an attempt is being made to establish an Israeli Empire from the Euphrates to the Nile.

Mr. Stokes: They have maps of it.

Mr. Younger: In Arab propaganda. this is often associated with Western Imperialism as well.
Surely, after the events of the last six months, that fear ought to have diminished. The fact is that two of the leading European Powers entered Egypt with their armed forces, and so did Israel. All three of them were eventually made

or persuaded by world opinion, principally using the United Nations, to withdraw.
Surely this ought to be a lesson not only to Colonel Nasser but to anybody else who may share those fears of Zionist expansionism that if they will play their part in supporting the United Nations, in turn they can get protection from it. That is what they have had, particularly Colonel Nasser, in recent months.
Despite the objections raised to this by the hon. Member for Windsor, I must press the Minister of State for a moment on the reference to the Guildhall Speech. The hon. Member for Windsor still does not seem to understand why we object to the phrase which was used in the original speech and which was repeated by the Foreign Secretary about a compromise. Surely if we talk about a compromise between these two settlements, if we can call them settlements—that of 1947 and that to which the Foreign Secretary referred as of 1948, although I think it was 1949—then whatever that means, surely it cannot mean the sort of minor frontier rectifications on which we are all agreed. Those two settlements are many, many miles apart and to talk about a compromise between them cannot be taken as meaning frontier rectifications which enable certain fields to be reunited with the villages in which their cultivators live.
It was certainly not so taken by the Arabs, as I can say having made a personal investigation in official Arab quarters. They took it to mean that we were prepared to make Israel give up a large part of the Negev. Rightly or wrongly, they took it to mean that, and I am convinced that they believed it rightly, because I have seen what I believe to be genuine sketches of plans which have been put forward at various levels from this country, and no doubt from others too, which involved a very substantial deprivation of Israel territory in the Negev.
Why did the Foreign Secretary repeat this error and why, when he was pressed today, was he not prepared to state quite straightforwardly that what he meant, whatever he may have said, was frontier rectifications, as we understand that term. This is not constructive talk, as was pointed out by the hon. Member for Farnham (Mr. Nicholson), who said that


no settlement can lie this way. I hope the Minister of State will see fit to bury this old blunder when he replies. He can do it quite simply by saying what the Foreign Secretary meant and what he did not mean.
In the few minutes remaining to me I want to speak about the position of the Soviet Union in the Middle East. The speeches in this debate have shown that on this side of the Committee it is the very general feeling that the presence of the Soviet Union in the area cannot diplomatically be ignored. I saw no sign of that in any of the speeches from the other side of the Committee. Surely the fact is, is it not, that one of the main causes of the crisis of last autumn was that in the previous autumn, at the end of 1955, the Soviet Union went into the Middle East, as it were, with the arms deal with Egypt? Whereas previously we had been able as Western Powers more or less to control the balance of arms, we then lost control and it was because arms were pouring into Egypt and we could do nothing about it that Israel eventually took the action she did. We were unable to stop the flow of arms. It rendered the Tripartite Declaration largely ineffective, even if we had sought, as I do not think the Government did, to maintain that Declaration in its full force. We are told that Soviet arms are now beginning to enter the area again. How do the Government propose to stop this if not by trying in some way to deal with the Soviet Union?
This brings me to what is known as the Shepilov note, the Soviet Note sent some weeks ago, to which there has just been a reply. The foreign Secretary dismissed the Soviet Note by saying, "We are right not to get entangled in their propaganda exercise." It is perfectly true that this document was a mixture of points which I think are acceptable to many of us and many very objectionable comments. No doubt in part at least it was a propaganda document. Even so, I cannot accept the reply which we sent on 11th March as being adequate. It was a wholly negative reply, and the Foreign Secretary's speech on this point this afternoon was every bit as sterile as the written reply.
Surely, if we do not like Mr. Shepilov's proposals, we can make our own. On the points upon which we think it important

to try to negotiate —and, in particular, I am thinking of the supply of arms to the Middle East—if we think that he has formulated it wrongly, let us turn down that proposal and make our own. But we have heard nothing from the Government, either at Question Time or today, of any proposals from our side in regard to what we understand is becoming the somewhat dangerous situation of Soviet arms coming into an area without our having any control over it at all.
We do not even know whether that part of the Tripartite Declaration dealing with foreign arms is considered to be still in force. If it is still in force, how, in the Government's view, can they possibly make it effective, because arms are now coming in not from three sources as before, but from four, and the fourth is not in the deal.
I admit that if one gets into negotiations like this one may get led on into discussion of military arrangements and so on in the Middle East, and in that, as the Foreign Secretary said, we must take full account of the aims and desires of our friends in the area, including those in the Bagdad Pact. But here it is not enough to bring out, as our written reply did, a whole lot of clichés about the sovereignty of the countries within the area. May it not be that there are some nations—and I am sure that there are—who, in the full exercise of their sovereignty, would be very glad indeed to undertake some form of military non-commitment, between the blocs, if thereby they could get a better security than they have today?
This is the sort of thing which is becoming widely and most responsibly discussed in Europe, and when it is said in our Note, as I think it was—or in the Foreign Secretary's speech today, I forget which—that we could not ask nations in the Middle East to undertake this sort of experiment when no one else undertakes it, it is not really true. The Austrians were very ready to undertake a form of neutrality, because they got a great deal in return.
Surely what we are doing is to hide behind an artificial conception of the complete sovereign independence of those nations which might very well, in their complete independence, want to take part in such a scheme. Nobody asks us to surrender initially any of our positions.
military or otherwise, except as part of a negotiation. All we ask is that the Government should show some sign of attempting to deal realistically with the undeniable presence of the Soviet Union in the Middle East.
In conclusion, I only want to say that, obviously, both of these problems—the problem of the Soviet Union and the problem of the Arab-Israel settlement—are bound to be very long jobs. I do not believe, and I do not think that anybody, on this side at any rate, believes that either of them is likely to be achieved by military force. I think that the use of force in the autumn of last year in fact set back to a considerable extent the solution of both problems.
It increased the participation of the Soviet Union in the Middle East, and it exacerbated the already bad relations and mutual suspicions between the Arab States and Israel. I think that patient negotiation at that time might, perhaps, have advanced a solution, but I am under no illusion that there can be any really rapid advance at all to a final solution. It will be a slow business.
Therefore, while we may talk in terms of ultimate sanctions, including military sanctions, at some time having to be used for some purpose which we cannot quite foresee, and whilst we must recognise that if such a situation arose it might prove extremely difficult to exert sanctions through the United Nations, I suggest that what we have now to consider is not primarily that problem at all but a problem of diplomacy, of negotiation rather than ultimate military sanctions. And, as I have already indicated, I believe that if that is the real task, then the United Nations does provide the framework within which we are likely to get the widest support for our legitimate objectives in this area.

9.5 p.m.

The Minister of State for Foreign Affairs (Commander Allan Noble): This is the first full debate on the Middle East which has been held in the House since 6th December. It seems to me that the atmosphere here today, and indeed in the Middle East, is a good deal calmer than it was then. The right hon. Gentleman the Member for Ebbw Vale (Mr. Bevan) tried to raise the temperature a little today, but he gave us some very

good advice when he told us never to reply to a hypothetical question. should like to add my congratulations to those which have already been given to the hon. Gentleman the Member for Wednesbury (Mr. Stonehouse) on his maiden speech. He combined the three prerequisites of a speech in the House—brevity, clarity, and knowledge of his subject. We were all very fond of his predecessor, and we look forward to hearing the hon. Member again.
We have had a good debate today. I hope that the House will agree that conditions in the Middle East do show a considerable improvement over three months ago. Much has happened since 6th December. The French and British forces on the Canal were replaced before Christmas by the United Nations Emergency Force, and that Force has now in turn replaced the Israeli forces which have completed their withdrawal to behind the armistice line. That is not, however, the only improvement that we can recall. Prior to 29th October there was no effective guarantee of peaceful conditions along these armistice lines. It is true, of course, that the United Nations Truce Supervision Organisation was in the area, but although it could investigate and report it was powerless to prevent any raids. Now, however, the United Nations Emergency Force has been created. It is at present in the Gaza strip, which was formerly the main base, as my right hon. and learned Friend said, for the organisation of Egyption Fedayeen raids into Israel.
Thus, the position along the frontiers is considerably better than before the Israeli attack took place. The position in Gaza, as has already been said, is admittedly a little uncertain, but that is, in the circumstances, hardly surprising. My right hon. and learned Friend went into that in great detail. Perhaps I could just emphasise that the armistice agreement was dictated exclusively by military considerations, and rights, claims and interests of a non-military character were excluded from it. Neither Egypt nor Israel has asserted sovereignty over the strip. The final disposal of the strip remains to be determined in a peace settlement. For the time being, therefore, the sovereignty is in abeyance. The armistice agreement said nothing about the civilian administration of the Gaza Strip.
Generally speaking, a military occupier should, in principle, not interfere with ordinary civilian administration, except in so far as it may be necessary to make arrangements for the maintenance or security of his troops, lines of communication, etc. The United Nations, however, in approving the reports of the Secretary-General of 22nd February and 8th March, recognised that the take-over of Gaza from the military and civilian control of Israel would, in the first instance, be exclusively by the United Nations Emergency Force, that is, by a military force. The question of what sort of civilian administration should be established in the Gaza strip is, therefore, still to be worked out.
It has not, I think, besen mentioned in the debate today that the Secretary-General in his report of 8th March made it clear that, in his view, U.N.R.W.A. had an important part to play in this respect. It is now up to the United Nations to arrange such subsequent steps as may he necessary for the civilian administration of Gaza, pending the peace settlement, and it has the right to expect full co-operation in this matter from Egypt as a fellow-member of the United Nations, who, incidentally, agreed to these arrangements.
We have just received an unofficial and unconfirmed report that Lieut.-Colonel Hatem, Egyptian information Director, has said today that "full co-operation "—and I quote—existed between the Egyptian authorities and the United Nations Emergency Force.

Mr. Paget: I hope that is not true.

Commander Noble: Perhaps the hon. Member will allow me to go on. I understand that Colonel Hatem said:
Egypt does what she can to help U.N.E.F. carry out the duties placed on their shoulders by United Nations Resolutions. The inhabitants of Gaza look upon U.N.E.F. as friendly forces and co-operate with them for the sake of peace and order.
I understand that Colonel Hatem also added that the inhabitants of Gaza co-operated with U.N.E.F.
so that the mission entrusted to it by the United Nations may be realised,

Mr. Crossman: Is the right hon. and gallant Gentleman quoting all this to make us feel that there is evidence for

his previous statement that the situation has greatly improved in Gaza? This is a very important question. Up to now the right hon. and gallant Gentleman has not made a clear answer. Is he saying with that statement that he is absolutely happy about everything in the Gaza Strip and that it gives him any confidence whatever that Fedayeen raids will stop in view of the statement made the same day that the Egyptians are determined to continue their Fedayeen raids?

Commander Noble: I merely give that quotation we have heard from Egypt. We must of course improve on this position, as several hon. Members have said, by searching for a final settlement of the Palestine problem which will allow both the Arab States and Israel to develop their own resources in peace and security. As hon. Members have said, that is clearly a most difficult problem. Her Majesty's Government are ready to help in any way they can towards a general settlement. The first stage in preparing the ground must be, as I have said, a period of peace along the borders. The United Nations Emergency Force is there and that is a positive gain.
Again as hon. Members have said, we must not forget the passionate feelings that this problem arouses throughout the Middle East. Hon. Members who have recently visited some of those countries will have experienced that at first hand. I can testify to the passionate feelings which the very existence of Israel arouses, even in the Parliamentary atmosphere of debates in the General Assembly of the United Nations. As the House is aware, I have just spent more than two months at the United Nations, a job which previously has been done by certain right hon. Members on both sides of the House. Perhaps in passing I might say how many people spoke to me about our late colleague Hector McNeil, who seemed to have made as many friends there as he did here.
There are many underlying causes for this intense Arab animosity towards Israel, but one unquestionably is the problem of the refugees. That has been raised several times in this debate. It was referred to by my hon. Friend the Member for Windsor (Sir C. Mott-Radclyffe) by the right hon. Member for Ipswich (Mr. Stokes) although I am afraid I did not


hear his speech—and by the hon. Member for Nelson and Colne (Mr. S. Silverman). In connection with the problem of refugees, Her Majesty's Government regret that in spite of the efforts of U.N.R.W.A. under the able direction of the Director, Mr. Labouisse, no significant progress has been made in this matter. It should be recalled that Her Majesty's Government and the United States Government between them contributed about 90 per cent. of all U.N.R.W.A. funds. Last year Her Majesty's Government contributed nearly £2 million, which proved to be more than 23 per cent., and we are paying a similar amount this year.
I am glad to say that during the recent debates in the United Nations on the U.N.R.W.A. Report the Arab host-Governments promised full co-operation with the director of U.N.R.W.A. and we hope that during the coming year he will extend the scope of his rehabilitation programme. I think that also is encouraging.
In his speech, my right hon. and learned Friend has stated the present position about the opening of the Canal as we see it today. As he has said, we with other Governments have made certain proposals to the Secretary-General about the interim opening of the Canal, that is to say, the interim arrangements to be made when the Canal is first opened.
As my right hon. and learned Friend said, we have pressed the Secretary-General for a reply on this but, as I understand it, he has not yet had a reply from Egypt. As my right hon. and learned Friend said, the final settlement of the Canal will be based on what has become known as the six principles, which were agreed to by Egypt, and also the correspondence between the Egyptian Foreign Minister and the Secretary-General. One of these six principles, and it is just as well to remind the House of it, is that the operation of the Canal should be insulated from the politics of any one country.
The House will remember, in addition, that the Resolution adopted by the Assembly on 2nd November urged that
upon the cease-fire being effective steps be taken to re-open the Suez Canal and restore secure freedom of navigation.

It also requested the Secretary-General
to observe and report promptly on the compliance with the present resolution to the Security Council and to the General Assembly for such further action as they may deem appropriate in accordance with the Charter.
Hon. Members on both sides of the House have had some things to say about the United Nations. Some were critical and some were not. In that connection, I would say that the United Nations has taken on great responsibilities in the Gaza Strip in preparing for an eventual final settlement of the Palestine problem, in clearing the Suez Canal—which is nearly completed—in preparing interim arrangements for the opening of the Canal and, to quote the Resolution,
…restore secure freedom of navigation to the Canal.
This answers to some extent the speech of the hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland (Mr. Grimond), and again I am sorry that I did not hear his speech.

Mr. Stokes: Did the right hon. and gallant Gentleman hear any?

Commander Noble: All except the two that I have mentioned.
The United Nations now stands at the bar of world opinion and will be judged by the success of the action which it is now taking in settling these problems. Several hon. Members have said that. It is now deeds and not resolutions that will count. My right hon. and gallant Friend the Member for Leicester, South-East (Captain Waterhouse) in, if I may say so, an admirable speech——

Hon. Members: Did the right hon. and gallant Gentleman hear it?

Commander Noble: And also my hon. Friend the Member for Aberdeen, South (Lady Tweedsmuir), whose speech I also heard——

Mr. Bevan: I am not sure whether in his reference to the hon. and gallant Member for Leicester, South-East (Captain Waterhouse) the right hon. and gallant Gentleman was referring to the form of the speech or to the content of the speech. If it was to the form of the speech, the right hon. and gallant Member for Leicester, South-East always speaks agreeably, but if the right hon. and gallant Gentleman was referring to the content of the speech, does he associate the Government with that content?

Commander Noble: I, of course, admired the form, and I did not think that I disagreed a great deal with what my right hon, and gallant Friend the Member for Leicester, South-East said. He said that we should be considering what we should do if the United Nations failed in this respect. I will say straight away that I do not think we should assume it would fail, but we must have that possibility in our minds and we must work out a policy in consultation with others concerned in the proposals that we made in the United Nations last month.

Mr. Bevan: rose—

Commander Noble: I am afraid that I cannot give way.

Mr. Bevan: With all respect——

Commander Noble: The debate ends at ten o'clock.

Mr. Bevan: This is a disgraceful performance.

Mr. Deputy-Speaker (Sir Charles Mac-Andrew): If the Minister does not give way, the right hon. Gentleman must resume his seat.

Mr. Bevan: The right hon. and gallant Gentleman the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs has been reading out his speech all the evening. It is really disgraceful. It is like a schoolboy at a prizegiving.

Commander Noble: Hon. Members may be interested to have the latest news from the Canal. If I may read that out, perhaps the right hon. Member for Ebbw Vale will not object.
General Wheeler has reported to the Secretary-General that the Canal proper with its ports, harbourages and by-passes is cleared of wrecks, with the exception of two in the south—[HON. MEMBERS: "We have heard all that."]—and the two in Port Said which are not an obstruction to normal traffic.
I hope that hon. Members will not go away from the House with a false impression of what General Wheeler has been trying to do. He has discharged his task with tact and energy, and if the Canal is cleared on time it will be largely due to his own efforts. I should like to associate myself with what the right hon. Member for Grimsby (Mr. Younger) said about

the Secretary-General. Great tasks have been assigned to him, and he is carrying them out with great skill.
The right hon. Gentleman asked me at the beginning of his speech about a certain rumour on the tape concerning Cyprus. I am afraid that I cannot answer him very fully, but it is my information that my right hon. Friend the Colonial Secretary has this evening heard from the Governor that some leaflets of this kind have today been distributed. I need not say that Her Majesty's Government would most gladly welcome any genuine move which would lead to an end of violence in Cyprus. Hon. Members would not expect me to say more tonight than that the House need not fear that Her Majesty's Government will show any lack of imagination in their handling of the problem.
Reference has been made to our reply to the Russian note on the Middle East, and it has been suggested that we should have probed their suggestion about economic aid to the Middle East. As far as economic aid to the Middle East is concerned, we have for years done what we could with our limited resources to assist the economic development of the countries in that region according to their need.
We have provided technical experts through the Middle East Development Division and otherwise. We have yearly paid substantial contributions to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for the Arab refugees. We have made a development loan to Jordan. We have given the utmost assistance to other countries of the region in carrying out their plans for using the sterling they receive from their oil royalties.
Since the inauguration of President Truman's Four Point Programme, the Americans too have disbursed large sums in technical assistance to the Middle East, apart from their contributions for the Arab refugees and other forms of aid to Iran, Turkey and Saudi Arabia; and now there is the Eisenhower Doctrine, which I will refer to in a minute.
The hon. Gentleman the Member for Ebbw Vale seems to think that the main problem is making our aid to those countries acceptable and the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Ipswich condemned the reluctant decision of the


United States Government and of Her Majesty's Government and of the International Bank to withdraw the Aswan Dam offer.

Mr. Stokes: I did not do anything of the sort. I said that the whole scheme was ridiculous and we ought never to have supported it, but having done so Her Majesty's Government behaved like a set of lunatics in withdrawing it. That is not exactly what I said, but it is something like it.

Commander Noble: It is roughly what I understood the right hon. Gentleman to say. I do not think that the problem was to devise an acceptable means of offering it. but rather of getting such Governments as Egypt to accept it on reasonable terms and to pay their own shares.
While we are talking about Russian economic aid in the Middle East, perhaps we can just have a look at what the Russians themselves have contributed in the past in the Middle East—nothing except arms for Syria and Egypt and, of course, free Communist literature. Yet they now recommend the precise course which we ourselves have been following as if it were some new initiative. It is hardly surprising that we do not take this approach very seriously.

Mr. Paget: Because it is our policy?

Commander Noble: Perhaps I may remind the right hon. Member for Grimsby what he himself said at the United Nations in 1950 when he was speaking on the subject of international co-operation for reconstruction and development and referring to the relief and rehabilitation programme. He said this:
To all this great international work the Soviet Union has contributed not an idea, not a man, not a rouble.

Mr. Younger: That is true, but are we to understand that the Minister is now depressed at the thought that the Soviet Union might conceivably start to contribute? I think that we ought at least to try to get it in. Whether we succeed or not, is another matter. But why does the right hon. and gallant Gentleman object to that?

Commander Noble: If the right hon. Gentleman believes that, he will believe

anything. Let us look at the Russian contributions in the last few years—7—

Mr. Younger: Why?

Commander Noble: Because I think it is worth putting them on record in view of the right hon. Gentleman's argument. The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees, nil. The United Nations Refugees Emergency Fund, nil. The United Nations Korean Relief and Reconstruction Agency, nil. The Russians did start to contribute to the U.N.E.T.A.P. in 1953, but their contribution was in unconvertible roubles, which meant that they could only train people in Russia.

Mr. Emrys Hughes: What about Egypt?

Commander Noble: Perhaps I might say a word about the Eisenhower doctrine which, so far as the United Kingdom Government is concerned, is very welcome. We also have wide economic interests in the area. We also wish to prevent Soviet penetration. We have political obligations under the Bagdad Pact and to States in treaty relations with us. The Eisenhower doctrine recognises the Communist danger and it provides for economic assistance. Whilst it involves the United Kingdom in no new obligations, it indicates a willingness on the part of the United States to undertake greater responsibilities in this area. At the Bermuda Conference, the President and the Prime Minister will, of course, discuss the problems of the Middle East.
In conclusion, whatever we may feel about the past, it is obvious that we can no longer rely on the system of military bases and old-fashioned defence treaties which established our influence in the area between the two wars. The Bagdad Pact is the model of our new relationship with the States of the Middle East. It is a free and equal partnership between independent sovereign States, and its strength has been proved by the way in which it has survived recent strains. It is still intact. We recognise that some are still opposed to it, for reasons of their own, others simply because they are opposed to any form of co-operation with the West.
It is wrong to accept the contention, largely emanating from Moscow, Cairo


and Damascus, that the Bagdad Pact countries are isolated in their goodwill for the West. Generally, the area from Morocco to Muscat and from Iran to the Sudan is basically prepared to co-operate with the West and with us. It is, therefore, wrong to talk sweepingly of Nasser arid the Arabs as if they were one. The Arabs may be united in their stand on the Palestine question, but this certainly does not mean that the great body of Arab opinion accepts Nasser's pretensions, or agrees with his foolish association with Russia and his hostility to the West.
It is the policy of Her Majesty's Government to encourage these friendly links, and we are confident that as time goes on the peoples of this area will more and more come to realise that their interests lie in free and equal association with the West.

9.29 p.m.

Mr. Gilbert Longden: I was glad to hear my right hon. and gallant Friend say that the Government considered the position in the Middle East to be very much better than it was before last October. That is what I sincerely believe. I think that far too many people in this country, and many of them are on the Opposition benches, are inclined entirely to forget that for ten years before last October the United Nations had been striving without the smallest effect——

Mr. Stokes: How does the hon. Member know?

Mr, Longden: —to bring; peace and settled conditions to the Middle East. In nine years the Security Council had had no fewer than 200 meetings——

It being half-past Nine o'clock, Mr. DEPUTY-SPEAKER proceeded, pursuant to Standing Order No. 16 (Business of Supply), to put forthwith the Question necessary to dispose of the Resolution under consideration.

Question, That this House doth agree with the Committee in the said Resolution, put and agreed to.

Mr. DEPUTY-SPEAKER then proceeded to put forthwith, with respect to each of the remaining Resolutions reported from the Committee of Supply but not yet agreed to by the House, the Question, That this House doth agree with the Committee in that Resolution.

VOTE 4. UNITED NATIONS

2. That a Supplementary sum, not exceeding £140,000, be granted to Her Majesty, to defray the charge which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1957, for subscriptions to the United Nations and towards the expenses of the United Nations Emergency Force and for a grant in aid of technical assistance for economic development.

VOTE 9. COLONIAL SERVICES

3. That a Supplementary sum, not exceeding £1,937,358, be granted to Her Majesty, to defray the charge which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1957, for sundry Colonial services, including subscriptions to certain international organisations and grants in aid; and certain expenditure in connection with the liabilities of the former Government of Palestine.

Resolutions agreed to.

CLASS III

VOTE 4. PRISONS, ENGLAND AND WALES

4. That a Supplementary sum, not exceeding £117,000, he granted to Her Majesty, to defray the charge which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1957, for the salaries and expenses of the office of the Prison Commissioners and of prisons, Borstal institutions and detention centres in England and Wales.

Resolution agreed to.

NAVY ESTIMATES, 1957–58

VOTE ON ACCOUNT

5. That a sum, not exceeding £125,000,000, be granted to Her Majesty, on account, for or towards defraying the charges for Navy Services which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1958.

Resolution agreed to.

CIVIL ESTIMATES AND ESTIMATES FOR REVENUE DEPARTMENTS, SUPPLEMEN-TARY ESTIMATES, 1956–57

6. That a Supplementary sum, not exceeding £98,365,931, be granted to Her Majesty, to defray the charge which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1957, for expenditure in respect of the Supplementary Estimates.

Resolution agreed to.

MINISTRY OF DEFENCE SUPPLEMENTARY ESTIMATE, 1956–57

7. That a Supplementary sum, not exceeding £1,650,000, be granted to Her Majesty, to defray the charge which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1957, for the salaries and expenses of the Ministry of Defence; expenses in connection with International Defence Organisations, including international subscriptions; and a grant in aid of certain expenses


incurred in the United Kingdom by the Government of the Unitied States of America.

Resolution agreed to.

NAVY SUPPLEMENTARY ESTIMATE, 1956–57

8. That a Supplementary sum, not exceeding £11,000,000, be granted to Her Majesty, to defray the charge which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1957, for expenditure beyond the sum already provided in the grants for Navy Services for the year.

Resolution agreed to.

AIR SUPPLEMENTARY ESTIMATE, 1956–57

9. That a Supplementary sum, not exceeding £10, be granted to Her Majesty, to defray the charge which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1957, for expenditure beyond the sum already provided in the grants for Air Services for the year.

Resolution agreed to.

CIVIL (EXCESSES), 1955–56

10. That a sum, not exceeding £30, be granted to Her Majesty, to make good excesses on certain grants for Civil Services for the year ended on the 31st day of March, 1956.

Resolution agreed to.

[For details of Resolutions, see OFFICIAL REPORT, 13th March, 1957; cols. 1256–1262.]

Mr. DEPUTY-SPEAKER then proceeded to put forthwith, with respect to each Resolution come to by the Committee of Supply and not yet agreed to by the House, the Question, That this House doth agree with the Committee in that Resolution.

Orders of the Day — SUPPLY [5th March]

NAVY ESTIMATES, 1957–58

VOTE A. NUMBERS

That 121,500 Officers, Seamen and Juniors and Royal Marines, who are borne on the books of Her Majesty's Ships and at the Royal Marine establishments, and members of the Women's Royal Naval Service and Queen Alexandra's Royal Naval Nursing Service, be employed for the Sea Service, for the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1958.

Resolution agreed to.

Orders of the Day — SUPPLY [7th March]

AIR ESTIMATES, 1957–58

VOTE A. NUMBER FOR AIR FORCE SERVICE

1. That a number of officers, airmen and airwomen, not exceeding 240,000, all ranks, be maintained for Air Force Service, during the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1958.

VOTE ON ACCOUNT

2. That a sum, not exceeding £240,000,000, be granted to Her Majesty, on account, for or towards defraying the charges for Air Force Services, including the expense of the reserve and auxiliary services (to a number not exceeding 224,000, all ranks, for the Royal Air Force Reserve, and 9,000, all ranks, for the Royal Auxiliary Air Force), which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March. 1958.

Resolutions agreed to.

Orders of the Day — SUPPLY [11th March]

ARMY. ESTIMATES, 1957–58

ARMY

VOTE A. NUMBER OF LAND FORCES

1. That a number of Land Forces, not exceeding 443,000, all ranks, be maintained for the safety of the United Kingdom and the defence of the possessions of Her Majesty's Crown, during the year ending on the 31st day of March. 1958.

VOTE ON ACCOUNT

2. That a sum, not exceeding £210,000,000, be granted to Her Majesty. on account, for or towards defraying the charges for Army Services, including the expense of the Reserve Forces (to a number not exceeding 385,000, all ranks, including a number not exceeding 373,000, other ranks), Territorial Army (to a number not exceeding 285,000, all ranks), and Home Guard (to a number not exceeding 1,900. all ranks), which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1958.

Resolutions agreed to.

Orders of the Day — WAYS AND MEANS [13th March]

Resolutions reported,

1. That, towards making good the Supply granted to Her Majesty for the service of the year ended on the 31st day of March, 1956, the sum of £30 be granted out of the Consolidated Fund of the United Kingdom.
2. That, towards making good the Supply granted to Her Majesty for the service of the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1957. the sum of £114,128,192 be granted out of the Consolidated Fund of the United Kingdom.
3. That, towards making good the Supply granted to Her Majesty for the service of the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1958. the sum of £1,677,923,000 be granted out of the Consolidated Fund of the United Kingdom.

Resolutions agreed to.

Bill ordered to be brought in upon the said Resolutions by the Chairman of Ways and Means, the Chancellor of the Exchequer and Mr. Powell.

Orders of the Day — CONSOLIDATED FUND (No. 2)

Bill to apply certain sums out of the Consolidated Fund to the service of the years ending on the thirty-first day of March, one thousand nine hundred and fifty-six, one thousand nine hundred and fifty-seven, and one thousand nine hundred and fifty-eight; presented accordingly, and read the First time; to be read a Second time Tomorrow and to be printed. [Bill 65.]

Orders of the Day — WALSALL EXECUTIVE COUNCIL (APPEAL COSTS)

Motion made, and Question proposed, That this House do now adjourn.—[Mr. E. Wakefield.]

9.35 p.m.

Mr. William Wells: The question I desire to raise is connected with the costs of a successful appeal to the Ministry of Health from a decision of the Walsall Executive Council. It arises out of the medical treatment given under the National Health Service to a young constituent of mine, Miss June Anne Evans, who died in the Manor Hospital at Walsall in January, 1955, at the age of seventeen.
Miss Evans's father is a plumber employed at a wage. The costs involved in this successful appeal amount to a total of £87 6s. 10d., which sum includes a solicitor's bill for £71 2s., which includes counsel's fees, and an item for loss of wages, amounting to £15 9s. 10d. In order to give the background to this appeal it is, unfortunately, necessary to traverse briefly the medical history of the treatment of the case without which the rest of the facts connected with the appeal must be unintelligible.
In order to avoid once again bringing too much into public what has already been made public locally about the medical individuals concerned, I shall refer to them throughout my speech as Dr. A., who was the doctor primarily responsible for the treatment of the case; Dr. B., who intervened when Dr. A had a day of rest, and Miss C., a medical student, who also plays a certain part in the history. I suggest that it would be useful to continue that practice throughout any other speeches which may be made.
Shortly, the facts of the case are that on 4th January, 1955, Miss Evans complained of severe pains and she suffered vomiting. Dr. A. was called and diagnosed gastro-enteritis. There was no further call by any doctor until 8th January, 1955, when, the patient's symptoms having become more severe, her father called at Dr. A's surgery at 9 a.m. Dr. A. called at 4.30 p.m. and again diagnosed gastro-enteritis. The following day was a Sunday. The father called


at the doctor's surgery at 5 p.m., and Dr. B., who was, no doubt, standing in for Dr. A. on that occasion, called at 6.30 p.m. with Miss C., who was allowed by Dr. B. to conduct the whole of the examination. She said that there was no sign of appendicitis, the parents having suggested that appendicitis was in fact the malady.
The doctor, who had taken no active part at all in the examination, said that Miss Evans was to be given a boiled egg and toast to eat. Following this visit by the doctor and Miss C., the patient spent a very uncomfortable night. The father, who, as events tragically turned out, was right, was dissatisfied with the conduct of the examination. He decided to get another doctor the next morning, and did so.
On 10th January this third doctor, of whom no complaint is made, called in response to the father's request. He ordered Miss Evans's immediate removal to hospital where she was X-rayed. As a result of the X-ray it was decided that an operation was urgently necessary but, unfortunately, the patient's condition was considered too weak for the operation then to be performed. On the following day, however, which was a week after Dr. A's first call, an operation was performed at 12 noon. At 4.30 p.m. the patient died, and after her death the causes of death were certified as, first, peritonitis: secondly, a perforated appendix, which was gangrenous, and, thirdly, a perforated small intestine.
Following the death of this young girl, her father, as he was entitled to do, made a complaint to the Executive Council set up under the National Health Service Acts in relation to the medical treatment which his daughter had received in her last illness. The hearing of this complaint took place on 3rd June following. The Executive Council decided that there had been no breach of the doctor's terms of service, and in this connection it may be right for me to refer to the letter which the then Minister of Health—now the Minister of Labour and National Service—wrote to me on 2nd November following. There had been a considerable volume of correspondence with which I need not trouble the House, but this letter forms an essential link in the chain. The Minister said:

As I explained in my letter of 2nd August, the Walsall Executive Council investigated the complaint made by Mr. Evans with regard to his daughter's medical treatment, and reached the decision that there had been no breach of the terms of service of the doctor responsible, either through her personal actions or through the actions of the doctors who treated Miss Evans on her behalf."—
there was in fact only one doctor—
I mentioned that Mr. Evans had the right of appealing to me against this decision and he in fact did so. An oral hearing of his appeal will be held in the near future.
The oral hearing of the appeal took place subsequently, but because it is most relevant to the complaint in relation to the cost of these proceedings, at this stage I must mention the terms of the third finding of the local Executive Council. It runs as follows:
The practice of allowing advanced students to accompany qualified medical practitioners in their day-to-day work is not only recommended but encouraged both by the Cohen Committee of the Ministry of Health and the General Medical Committee of the British Medical Association and has been accepted as a desirable and necessary procedure for a number of years.
This opinion was explained to the complainant, but both he and his wife remained emphatically unconvinced and insisted on maintaining that the examination, done by a student, was null and void and of no value. although done in the presence of a qualified medical practitioner.
That finding could scarcely have been more misleading to all concerned. Of course, it was no part of the parents' complaint against the doctor that a medical student had been present at the examination. It was not even a part of the complaint that the medical student had conducted an examination. The essence of the complaint was that, the parents having expressed a definite view as to the cause of the patient's very great suffering, the doctor rested content with an examination by the student, took no trouble to verify the facts which he felt she had adequately ascertained, so that in this critical stage, as it proved, of her illness, the diagnosis was conducted by somebody who, certainly in law and to a large extent in fact, was at that time an unqualified person.
The essence of the complaint was therefore misapprehended by the Walsall Executive Council in this crucial finding after the hearing before it. It was this


complete non sequitur which emerged in its finding which led to what ultimately proved to be a false and misleading conclusion on the facts of this very tragic case.
The appeal to the Minister followed its normal course. It was heard orally before, I believe, two inspectors. A letter from the Minister. who was then the right hon. Member for Thirsk and Malton (Mr. Turton), communicated the Minister's decision after the hearing of the appeal, in a letter dated 15th March, 1956. That decision referred to the finding of the executive committee and held that there had been a lack of proper medical attention in the visit on the crucial day, 9th January, 1955, when the examination was conducted by an unqualified person, Miss C. On this, the most vital element in the case, the finding was in favour of the complainants.
As I have already explained, Mr. Evans is not a man of means; he is a plumber working for a wage. The sum involved in this appeal was a serious matter to him. Following the appeal, in which no order had been made as to the payment of costs, Mr. Evans wrote to me, and I took the matter up with the Minister. In a letter which I wrote to the right hon. Member for Thirsk and Malton, I said:
Mr. Evans is, however, concerned that no order has been made as to costs. He is by no means a wealthy man, and to find £71 is probably not an easy matter; but in any event, surely it follows from the fact that the appeal has been allowed that Mr. Evans' efforts have been justified, and surely the costs should to some extent at least follow the event.
The right hon. Gentleman replied to me in a letter of 27th March, 1956, saying:
On the question of costs, it is an established practice to make an order for costs against one of the parties to an appeal only in quite exceptional circumstances; for instance, where the case was pursued unreasonably. This principle was indicated in a letter sent to Mr. Evans' solicitors last August, when they were informed that the Minister had the power to award costs against either party to the appeal, but would not award costs against an appellant unless he came to the conclusion that there was no reasonable justification for the appeal. It has never been held that a respondent was acting unreasonably in defending himself against an appeal seeking to reverse a decision that he had not failed to comply with his terms of service, and I am afraid that the doctor could not properly be penalised in this way, especially since the appeal was allowed only in relation to treatment on a particular day of Miss Evans' illness, and thus was in effect allowed only in part.

I place myself in the hands of the House, but really could an argument be more sophisticated than that? The Minister, on the crucial point in the appeal, after having had placed before him the evidence and after having consulted his Medical Advisory Council, had come to the conclusion that Dr. A. had failed to comply with the terms of service of medical practitioners, in that her deputy failed on the 9th January, 1955, to render all proper and necessary treatment in a case which subsequently proved fatal.
Considerable argument followed that letter of the Minister, but on the crucial point that he raised, that the appeal was allowed only in part, I cannot do better than quote from a letter written by the solicitors to Mr. Evans himself, in which they said:
In conclusion, we observe the concluding words contained in the last paragraph of the letter, that the appeal was in effect allowed only in part. Considering that the 9th January, 1955. was the last and most vital visit to your daughter, the observation is in very had taste, to say the least. The Minister's letter of the 2nd March. 1956, as to the decision makes no reference to disallowance of costs because of this or any other reason.
I do not comment on the taste, bad or otherwise, of the then Minister's reply, but I do complain that it is certainly illogical and possibly a little bit evasive, when a finding has been made on a crucial part of the case, on a crucial visit two days before the patient died, and when a finding has been made that on that crucial visit proper medical treatment was not supplied, to say that the appeal was allowed only in part.
I think it is just to say that to some extent one faces here a certain logical dilemma. If the Regulations state that a party is not to be condemned in costs if the contesting of an appeal is reasonable, it is, I concede, hard to say that Dr. A was unreasonable in contesting an appeal when the tribunal which had heard the complaint in the first case—the executive council—had found in Dr. A's favour. The plain fact is that it was the executive council itself, by its extraordinarily illogical third finding, that had been the cause of the trouble.
I am not concerned with any precise analogies from the courts of law. At one stage in the correspondence, it was put to me that a tribunal whose decision was


reversed was never condemned in costs; and of course, when dealing with courts of law, that is the truth. I would only say, to do the council credit, that in this case the executive council itself, in a letter written to myself, has expressed the view that
The council feel that on the Minister's decision the complainant's appeal was allowed and therefore he should be recompensed for expenses incurred in exercising his right of appeal.
Mr. Evans, as he was entitled to do and finding that my representations appeared to carry no weight with the Ministry of Health, approached a Government supporter in the person of the hon. Member for Walsall, South (Sir H. d'Avigdor-Goldsmid) in the hope that his representations might be more fruitful. The hon. Member for Walsall, South made what, I thought, was a constructive suggestion and in a letter written by him, of which he was good enough to send me a copy, he said:
I expect that your council, in common with other National Health Executives, has at its disposal funds not controlled by the Ministry of Health out of which it would be possible to make a contribution towards the complainant's expenses if this is thought desirable.
As the Council pointed out, however, it
has no such funds and all expenditure…can only be made by a council with the approval of the Minister of Health.
That, therefore, is the position.
It is a sad and tragic story. One may think that it is not a very good argument in favour of the claim that is being made by the medical profession that it alone, out of all classes in the community, should be exempt from the effects of the inflation from which we are all, in common, suffering. I have some sympathy with Miss C. and I hope that she will have a very successful medical career, in spite of this initial disaster, a disaster to which, if her superiors had conducted themselves properly, she would never have been a party.

It being Ten o'clock, the Motion for the Adjournment of the House lapsed, without Question put.

Motion made, and Question proposed, That this House do now adjourn.—[Mr. E. Wakefield.]

Mr. Wells: I can only say on this part of the case that, having had a cousin of my own, a girl recently married, die as

a result of a failure to diagnose appendicitis and having in my professional career encountered several cases of the same kind, it seems that this question of appendicitis, which is, one would have thought, a common enough complaint, is a kind of medical pons asinorum. But that is on the medical aspect of the matter.
The issue tonight is simply that the father, out of his natural feelings, out of his desire that what he and his wife have suffered shall not be suffered by other parents, and out of his anxiety that in future at any rate responsibility should rest where it belongs, on the shoulders of the doctor in charge of the case, has pursued this matter. He has pursued it with success, and in my submission there is an overriding case in plain justice and equity for the costs which he has incurred in doing so to be recompensed. The unreasonableness in this case lay in the Executive Council's third finding, and the Minister of Health should either accept responsibility for this himself or else approve payment by the Council of the costs incurred.

10.1 p.m.

Sir Henry d'Avigdor-Goldsmid: I know that we are anxious to hear the reply from my hon. Friend the Parliamentary Secretary and I do not propose to take up the time of the House by going over again the ground which has been so fully covered by the hon. and learned Member for Walsall, North (Mr. W. Wells). He and I share the honour of representing the borough in the House, and I must say that it is a great pleasure to be able to speak with him on a subject on which we both feel the same. It is a tribute to our Parliamentary democracy that his constituent has had the services of this eminent forensic expert and that the matter is now being brought to the very highest level we know in order that justice may be done.
It is only by the action of geography that Mr. Evans' residence falls within the boundaries of Walsall, North. His is a case which attracts much interest locally and I would say that my constituents, who live in Walsall, South and who are not always conscious of the boundaries between the two, are equally concerned to see that justice is done to Mr. Evans.
This is a case in which a working man with no special advantages of birth or education has been able, by his persistence and patience and by the conviction with which he has pursued his claim, to persuade the Minister to uphold his appeal from the decision of the Executive Council. Furthermore, at the rehearing of the case he succeeded in winning it. In the circumstances, the Walsall Executive Council thought that he ought to be recompensed for the expense incurred in exercising his right of appeal, and I think that most reasonable people would agree with this. Nothing can bring Mr. Evans' daughter to life, but the reimbursement of his expenses is all the modest indication that he asks; and opinion in Walsall —and this is certainly not a party matter —is unanimous that he deserves to get it.
I think that one of the difficulties that Mr. Evans has had in having his claim recognised can to some extent be attributed to the extraordinarily high state of medical care and attention obtainable in Walsall, which is such as to make this charge of failing to give all proper treatment virtually unheard of there. if the Parliamentary Secretary thinks it possible to meet Mr. Evans' request, I can assure 'him that in Walsall it will be taken as 'representing mere justice in an altogether exceptional case, and in no conceivable circumstances as a slur on medical conditions in the town.

10.5 p.m.

The Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Health (Mr. J. K. Vaughan-Morgan): I make no complaint about the manner in which this issue has been raised both by the hon. and learned Member for Walsall, North (Mr. W. Wells) and by my hon. Friend the Member for Walsall, South (Sir H. d'AvigdorGoldsmid). I think that they have deployed the facts and the questions involved in this difficult issue very fairly. The issues involved arise from the death of June Anne Evans. I will add nothing to the facts which the hon. Member for Walsall, North gave about that unhappy incident except, if I may, to express my sympathy, and that of my right hon. Friend with all her relations.
The real question which is at issue here is the complaint to Walsall Executive Council of the standards of professional practice of a given practitioner in so far

as his terms of service under the National Health Service are concerned, and the necessary and relevant costs in an appeal. There are no other issues with which we are concerned. Mr. Evans, at one stage, issued a writ against the doctor concerned, claiming damages on account of his daughter's death. That is a matter for the civil courts, and would involve questions and issues with which we are not concerned tonight. The issue tonight is the different one, to which I have referred, and which involves the machinery set up under the National Health Service Act. I must again emphasise the importance of not confusing the two issues.
Mr. Evans made a complaint to the Walsall Executive Council under the National Health Service (Service Committees and Tribunal) Regulations. On the advice of their chairman, the Medical Service Committee in the first place proposed to dismiss the complaint as not showing prima facie ground of complaint, but the Council referred back the committee's report to this effect. The committee then heard the case, and advised that there had been no breach of the doctor's terms of service.
In a summary of the position, they said that the complainant's case seemed to rest on the following points: first, failure on the part of the doctors concerned to make a correct diagnosis; second, failure to make more frequent visits, and third, permitting examination by a student. They observed that a wrong diagnosis was not a breach of the terms of the service of doctors working under the National Health Service; secondly, that the doctor did not follow up his first visit because he thought that the girl would get better very soon; and that the practice of allowing advanced students to accompany doctors in their day-to-day work had been accepted as a necessary and desirable procedure for a number of years.
They expressed themselves
…quite satisfied with the manner in which the medical examination of the complainant's daughter was performed by the student under the direct supervision of a qualified medical practitioner, in that such examination formed part of the normal recognised procedure for the training of advanced students.
When notified that the Executive Council had decided in accordance with the recommendation of the Medical


Service Committee, Mr. Evans appealed to the Minister, and, as we have heard, on 30th November, 1955, there was an oral hearing of his appeal. Both the appellant and the doctors were represented by counsel. The result of the appeal, which was issued in March, 1956, after consultation with the Medical Advisory Committee set up under this procedure and composed of three of the Minister's medical officers and three general practitioners, was that the doctor responsible should be reprimanded on the ground of a breach of the terms of service
…in that her deputy failed on 9th January, 1955, to render all proper and necessary treatment.
The implication was that examination by the medical student without participation by the doctor was not adequate, but that the executive council had been right in taking the view that Dr. A. had paid adequate visits and made adequate medical examinations. The Minister did not use his power to withhold money from the doctor's remuneration.
Under this procedure, the question of costs arises only in connection with an appeal. While, of course, complainants or respondents may incur legal costs in connection with the complaint to the executive council, paid advocates are excluded from conducting the case before the service committee of the Executive Council, and the procedure is essentially an informal one conducted by the parties concerned. Accordingly, there is no power to award costs. When there is an oral hearing in connection with an appeal there is such a power, and there is also a power to direct an executive council, whether on its application or not, to contribute to the costs of the parties.
In his correspondence with the Minister, the hon. and learned Member had argued that, on the analogy of the normal rule in legal proceedings. costs should follow the event. This follows civil procedure, but it should be pointed out that costs are not regularly allowed under criminal procedure, and that, in so far as the procedure on appeal to the Minister relates to complaints of infraction of obligations to the State, and is not an attempt to obtain restitution, the analogy with civil procedure is not complete. Proceedings by way of complaint to an executive council and

appeal to the Minister do not, of course, extinguish the citizen's right of going to the Courts to obtain restitution.
The general principles of the award of costs by tribunals fall within the terms of reference of the Committee on Administrative Tribunals and Inquiries under the chairmanship of Sir Oliver Franks, and have been raised in evidence before that Committee. Thus the general question is in some measure sub judice that Committee. If, however, they were to adopt literally the principle that costs should follow the event, as in the civil courts, they would doubtless recognise that this would have a restrictive effect on the use of the right of appeal by persons complaining against practitioners working under the National Health Service. It should be remembered that, except perhaps for repayment of expenses they have incurred—usually quite small expenses such as statutory charges for dental treatment under the National Health Service—complainants are not themselves hoping to obtain money under this procedure. They can, and often do, make complaints and conduct appeals without themselves incurring legal costs, and they would be deterred by the prospect of responsibility for the practitioner's legal costs if they were not successful. In other words, a rule that "costs follow the event" might seem on balance to work against complainants. Indeed, Mr. Evans proceeded with his appeal with the advantage of a statement in a letter of 22nd August, 1955, that,
If there is an oral hearing the Minister has the power under the Regulations to award costs against either party to the appeal, hut he would not award costs against an appellant unless he came to the conclusion that there was no reasonable justification for the appeal.
The principle implied by that letter makes it obviously most difficult to award costs against the respondent, who can scarcely be unreasonable in seeking to defend himself in a matter which might seem to bear on his professional competence. Certainly in this case, which was a borderline one from the point of view of medical care, he could not be regarded as unreasonable in defending himself, the more so that there was publicity in the local Press.
There remains the question of a contribution to Mr. Evans's costs by the Executive Council. Here the analogy with the civil courts breaks down for costs on appeal


are not paid by an inferior court whose decision is over-ruled. Executive Councils have, however, occasionally been authorised or required to contribute to the costs of parties. In one case they were authorised to contribute to the cost of a complainant in providing himself with legal representation at the appeal by the respondent and thus absolving the Executive Council from incurring similar costs. Otherwise such contributions have been associated with some form of mistake, unreasonableness, or undue severity on the part of the Executive Council.
In the present case the report of the Service Committee of the Executive Council showed confusion between the doctrine that a student might accompany a doctor on his rounds, and his doing the work himself, and the finding on the appeal implies that whatever the student might properly do, it was not sufficient for a doctor to supervise by eye alone an examination intended particularly to deal with the possibility of appendicitis. The Committee made also an unfortunate reference to the General Medical Council, instead of to the British Medical Association, which was a mere slip. Nevertheless, the Council's finding on the case as a whole was supported in large measure and overturned on one point only. Thus it could not be regarded as widely wrong. It was a case in which "costs following the event" might have led to the award of a proportion of costs —perhaps one-third but certainly not necessarily one-third—of the fees actually charged by Mr. Evans's lawyer or incurred by him. In the light of practice on other cases. this was not an occasion for payment by the Executive Council.
I can assure the House that this matter has been given by my right hon. Friend and his predecessors much consideration and much earnest thought. I have been through the whole record in great detail, but I regret that, on the facts, it is quite impossible for me to recommend my right hon. Friend to reconsider his decision.

10.19 p.m.

Mr. Wells: I am grateful in the first instance to the hon. Baronet the Member for Walsall, South (Sir H. d' Avigdor-Goldsmid) for the support he has been good enough to give me.

Mr. Deputy-Speaker (Sir Gordon Touche): The hon. Member can only speak again with the leave of the House.

Mr. Wells: With the leave of the House, I am much obliged to the hon. Baronet for the support he has given me on this occasion. There is only one satisfactory aspect of the speech which the Parliamentary Secretary has made. That is that for the first time the Ministry has accepted that there was a confusion in the findings of the Committee and that that confusion, it follows, was the basis of its decision. I really find myself astonished at his argument—continued tonight as it has been in the correspondence:—that this was an appeal successful only in part. That seems to be based on an essential misconception, drawn from what field I do not know—it certainly was not drawn from the courts of law—that be-cause one of the grounds of the appeal is rejected the appeal can be said to be successful only in part.
If the appeal is against the treatment of a patient by a doctor and the appellate tribunal finds that in fact the doctor has not treated the patient properly, that is a successful appeal. It is not an appeal successful in part, but an appeal that has succeeded. It may be that one or two of the grounds of the appeal have not succeeded, but that is not the point. With all respect to the hon. Gentleman, I think that some of the analogies which he has pursued do not greatly add to the matter. He said that this was more in the nature of a criminal complaint than a civil one and that costs are not usually awarded in criminal cases. That is a very wide statement indeed. There is a great deal of qualification to that. Costs are frequently awarded in criminal cases.
The hon. Gentleman then appeared to pursue the argument that Mr. Evans has his rights in civil proceedings. That, again, in form has something to commend it but in fact very little, because, of course, in civil proceedings where there has been a death it is a matter for the Fatal Accidents Act and there, by law, it is necessary to establish that the person who claims was a dependent of the person who died. Here, of course, the exact reverse was the truth. The only exception to that is where the plaintiff brings an action as an executor or administrator and says that there has been damage to the estate through the deceased's loss of expectation of life.
I should have thought that the hon. Gentleman, from his days in the law, would have known that the courts limit


themselves very narrowly to the amount of damages that they award for such claims. The issue in my submission is not on any of these rather small points. It is simply this. Mr. Evans, not a wealthy man, has at great cost and pains to himself fought a successful appeal. He has ventilated a problem of general importance. He has brought home, I would hope conclusively, at any rate to such parts of the medical public as will read the journals that circulate among them, the fact that examination by a student is no substitute for examination by a doctor and that a doctor who allows an examination to be conducted by a student

places himself as well as the patient in peril. That is a very valuable lesson, which I hope will be taken to heart, but it is a lesson that Mr. Evans has taught, so far, at his own expense.
Whatever small argument can be adduced from analogies in other fields, it is a monstrous failure of equitable treatment to say that this man shall have to pay the costs of this appeal, which has vindicated complaints against medical treatment as a result of which he lost his only child, his daughter.

Question put and agreed to.

Adjourned accordingly at twenty-four minutes past Ten o'clock.